http://www.asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2474&Itemid=185

The Reasons for the Thai Impasse


Written by Haseenah Koyakutty    
Tuesday, 18 May 2010 
 
Apimongkol: In the end, it is about one man's protest.Red Shirts, government 
remain far apart 

When vats of human blood were spilled by Thailand's Red Shirt movement in the 
early stages of its "million man" march two months ago, it was described by 
some in the establishment and some analysts as a desperate cultural stunt 
designed to shock the authorities into taking the 150,000-strong movement 
seriously. The rallies did not catch on with the wider public.

But the blood-spilling tactic was also a veiled political threat. Jaran 
Ditapichai, a leader belonging to United Front for Democracy Against 
Dictatorship or UDD put it this way: by staging "the biggest demonstration in 
Thai history," they planned to make Prime Minister Abhisit Vejajjiva choose 
between "dissolution (of the House) or suppression." If suppression were to 
occur, Jaran told the foreign media before kicking off the UDD's campaign 
"there will not be elections if there is civil war." 

As Bangkok convulses and the death toll mounts, did the UDD - the Red Shirts - 
get what it wanted all along? Bloodshed? 

Today, after weeks of unadulterated violence and sporadic negotiations, both 
sides are far apart with diametrically opposed positions that seemingly make 
talks impossible. As to the UDD, the biggest question is whether Thaksin 
Shinawatra, the former prime minister whose ouster eventually developed into 
the crisis that faces Thailand, is still in charge. Thaksin yesterday issued a 
formal statement asking all sides "to step back from the abyss and begin a new 
and genuine dialogue between the parties." It seems to have had little effect 
so far.

The UDD's "Commander Red" Major General Khattiya Sawasdipol or Sae Dang, a 
former Thai army officer allied with deposed premier Thaksin died Monday after 
a targeted assassination last week that triggered the latest orgy of violence. 
Army Chief Anupong Paochinda, Defense Minister Prawit Wongsuwon and Deputy 
Prime Minister Suthep Thaugsuban, who leads security operations, attended a 
separate wake for Lt. Gen. Daopong Ratanasuwan's mother Monday but the trio 
skipped Khattiya's wake, where throngs of people flocked to last night. The 
royal family has however sponsored Khattiya's funeral rites, according to local 
media. 

"Those that called this rally cycle peaceful were suckered by the allure of Red 
romanticism, and forgot last April," said a source referring to the riots that 
broke out last year after the Red Shirts stormed an ASEAN meeting in Pattaya 
that left world leaders scrambling for safety. At the time, a moderate UDD 
leader and pious Buddhist, Veera Musikhapong, called off the protest when the 
capital descended into chaos. This year, Veera quit the UDD after failing to 
persuade hard-line elements last weekend to accept Abhisit's roadmap and 
November 14 elections offer, and his departure from the UDD at the eleventh 
hour paved the way for anarchy. 

"(Seh Dang's) passing is an opportunity for the Reds to blame all violence on 
him and move on and out. Instead it will reveal that the majority of the 
purveyors of violence remain," the source added. 

Chaturon Chaisang, an opposition former Deputy Prime Minister and senior 
Thaksin ally, however quashed any notion that the Red Shirts espoused violence. 
In an interview, he acknowledged the UDD lost credibility after Khattiya's 
capos recently stormed Chulalongkorn Hospital situated next to the protest site 
and when their demands kept shifting. 

But Chaturon argued that the UDD's new demand for some government 
accountability for the April 10 violence when a disproportionate number of 
protestors were shot and killed was reasonable. Twenty-five people died then. 
The talks collapsed after the UDD suddenly demanded that Suthep, the deputy 
prime minister handling security, be arrested. 

"The UDD was not going to pack up until there was some charge against the prime 
minister and Suthep. They were asking Suthep to surrender to the police but the 
police have no jurisdiction over the case. Suthep is a political appointee and 
it is up to the counter-corruption body that also handles illegal activities in 
Thailand to investigate Suthep. There was some confusion about the process of 
accountability but the UDD leaders had a point," said Chaturon, who had helped 
the UDD with the negotiation process but could not close the deal. 

The granting of amnesty was another sticking point, according to Chaturon. In 
previous episodes of violence in Thailand, notably in 1973, 1979 and 1992, the 
granting of amnesty had leveled the playing field. The government is currently 
reluctant to grant blanket amnesty to the UDD leaders, instead branding them 
"terrorists." Government negotiator Korbsak Sabhavasu, Secretary General to 
Abhisit, did not want to comment on the quality of the peace talks as the 
crisis takes hold but a Bangkok MP allied with the government Apimongkol 
Sonakul explained why amnesty is today a bad idea: 

"If you want the breakdown of society then you give amnesty. They know they can 
protest again and get amnesty. In terms of long-term building of democracy, it 
is the first button to the death of democracy." 

"We took non-military and non-police actions (at first). We talked about 
cutting their supplies (in the Red Shirts' Ratchaprasong encampment). In any 
kind of negotiations, sometimes you have to go overboard to put pressure on 
them and they have to go overboard to put pressure on you in order to take a 
step towards each other, and that's not unusual," Apimongkol added on why both 
sides issued threats and ultimatums in Thai-style talks that, in the end, 
proved irreconcilable. 

In his "Five-Point Road Map", Prime Minister Abhisit offered to dissolve the 
House in September, presumably after the government is able appoint army 
officials in an upcoming reshuffle and control the state budget, which Chaturon 
stressed ought to be the prerogative of the new government. This point also 
caused a rift amongst the UDD leadership. Some, like Veera, thought Abhisit's 
timeline was the most practical, others thought it insincere. 

Observers note that the royalist Yellow Shirts, for all the movement's equally 
criminal failings - and none of its leaders have been jailed - had at least 
complete cohesion in the leadership ranks. 

As the tit-for-tat continues, many Bangkok residents are also divided over 
whether the Red Shirt movement has moved beyond former Premier Thaksin 
Shinawatra who is on the run for a corruption conviction. Several independent 
analysts have consistently argued that Thaksin has unleashed socio-economic 
forces against Bangkok's aristocratic class that are now impossible to contain. 

Apimonkol, the blue-blooded Bangkok MP, conceded that the protestors feel 
hard-done by when the political parties they support (linked to Thaksin) are 
routinely dissolved but he also best summed-up the dominant sentiment amongst 
many in the Bangkok elite: 

"(Thaksin), the leader of the grassroots is one of the most prominent elitists 
in Thailand. 

"If I said to you Khun Thaksin came out today and went on TV and said: 'Red 
protesters, please go home. It is enough damage to the country, please go 
home.' Do you think they would go home? I think they would. Within 20 minutes, 
they would be packing their bags. In the end, it is about one man's protest," 
Apimongkol said.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Kirim email ke