http://www.asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2550&Itemid=185


No Reconciliation for Thailand's Red Shirts

Written by Richard S. Ehrlich    
Tuesday, 22 June 2010 
 
Pojaman's on the list, divorce or notThailand Freezes Accounts to Hit Reds 


Despite public promises of compromise by Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva, 
Thailand's military-backed government is continuing to tighten the screws on 
protesters, most recently freezing bank accounts belonging to 83 wealthy 
suspected supporters of the two-month insurrection which ended in May.

"I insist that the government has never intended to persecute anyone," Abhisit 
told reporters after freezing the accounts. However, what is going on outside 
on the streets appears to belie that as the Army's crackdown continues. As Asia 
Sentinel reported on June 16, at least 435 Red Shirt protesters remain in Thai 
jails and prisons, with more believed to be added every day. 

Although the government must call elections before 2011 is out, Abhisit is 
showing no sign that they will be held any time soon. The government has also 
launched a massive, expensive public relations campaign to convince Thais and 
the international community that this Buddhist majority, Southeast Asian nation 
is back on track. 

A major concern for international investors is how far the Abhisit government 
is willing to go to impede the international flow of capital in its attempts to 
run down the supporters of ousted Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, who is 
outside the country. The documents released in connection with the 
sequestration of the accounts didn't indicate a paper trail, making it opaque 
as to far, or where, the government is willing to look for connectons to 
Thaksin.  
Some 83 prominent Thais were named publicly Monday in a government-issued 
financial blacklist, alongside details of how much money they allegedly 
withdrew from their bank accounts during the failed two-month-long protests. 
The list includes family members of the fugitive Thaksin, 23 politicians, 15 
businesspersons, 17 protest leaders of the Red Shirts, better known as the 
United Front for Democracy against Dictatorship, and five retired senior 
military officers and police officers.


"The government is trying to weaken the Red network, especially the sources of 
its funding, using the accusation of the existence of a terrorist network as a 
justification in doing so,"said a think-tank source. "Dangerously, the Bangkok 
residents agree with the government's plan. Some of those are in the opposition 
party, Puea Thai, so this could also mean that they want to weaken their 
political opponents and this could cause an impact on the upcoming election, 
although it will not be any time soon."

The frozen accounts may make it difficult for the Reds' preferred Puea Thai 
party to organize and campaign later on. The immediate focus of the blacklist, 
however, appears to be an attempt to link those names to the Reds' illegal 
barricading of central Bangkok and take action against anyone found guilty of 
funding the siege. Bangkok and 23 of Thailand's 76 provinces are still under 
"emergency rule" -- one step below martial law -- which empowers the military 
and other authorities to arrest, secretly detain and interrogate suspects, and 
censor TV and radio broadcasts, newspapers and Internet websites, along with 
other forms of control.

Even those off the list are being monitored closely, the source said, with the 
idea that if they have transferred large sums of money they could be put on the 
list as well. "This government is very assertive indeed," the source said. 

The 83 alleged financiers have been ordered by Gen. Anupong Poachinda to report 
to the Department of Special Investigation starting Monday, June 28, according 
to Tharit Pengdit, the department chief. Under Anupong's order, financial 
institutions will be required to submit additional documents on transactions by 
the 83 if asked, Tharit said.

"I still believe that there are attempts to financially support [the Red 
Shirts] by a network of supporters," Abhisit told reporters. He promised to put 
Red Shirt leaders and activists on trial as "terrorists," which could result in 
death sentences or lengthy imprisonment. Critics of Abhisit's crackdown say the 
government is continuing to exaggerate the Red Shirts' actions in an attempt to 
dodge responsibility for the 90 people - 79 of them civilians - who died during 
clashes between protesters and the military, which also injured 1,800 others. 

The Reds have demanded that the prime minister and other top government and 
military leaders be put on trial for murder because they allowed the army to 
use US-supplied M-16 and Israeli-made Tavor assault rifles, plus armored 
personnel carriers and other weapons.

The government said that while most of the thousands of Red Shirts were 
relatively peaceful, a secretive unidentified group among their supporters used 
rifles and grenades against the military, prompting the army to deploy 
thousands of troops and use force in "self-defense."

Speakers at a forum at Bangkok's Thammasat University on June 19 accused the 
army of using excessive force against the Red Shirts, and said the government 
committed human rights abuses. 

"What the state has done is in violation of the United Nations' principles on 
human rights," Krittiya Archavanikul of Mahidol University's Human Rights 
Center said at the forum. "The state has used the term 'terrorism' to clean the 
dirt it is hiding."

The Reds have widespread support in Thailand's north and northeast, and among 
the urban poor in Bangkok and other cities. The Reds remain angry over the 
military's 2006 bloodless coup that ousted Thaksin and that an amnesty was 
arranged for the coup leaders to avoid prosecution while no such amnesty 
appears in sight for Thaksin, who became an international fugitive after being 
convicted for corruption and sentenced in absentia to two years imprisonment, 
or his followers.

Who made the list

The financial blacklist includes Thaksin's divorced wife, Pojaman Damapong, for 
allegedly withdrawing Bt54 million (US$1.6 million) between September 2009 and 
May this year, as well as two of their adult children, son Panthongtae 
Shinawatra, and unmarried daughter Pinthongta Shinawatra, who made combined 
withdrawals totaling nearly 11 billion baht (US$330 million), along with four 
other relatives.

More than a dozen politicians who are perceived as supporting Mr. Thaksin and 
the Reds are also on the list alongside seven Red Shirt leaders. Among the 
politicians, the biggest withdrawals appeared to be by Sudarat Keyuraphan, who 
had been an executive in Thaksin's party. After the 2006 coup, she was among 
101 people banned from politics for five years due to a ruling against their 
now-dissolved Thai Rak Thai (Thais Love Thais) party for election violations. 
The seven Red leaders included three who were very outspoken during the 
protests: Veera Musikhapong, Kwanchai Praipana, and Weng Tojirakarn. Companies 
on the list included S.C. Asset Corporation, P.T. Corporation, S.C.K. Estate, 
S.C. Office Park, and other Thai financial management services. No evidence was 
made public linking any individuals' withdrawals to other people's deposits, 
nor was a paper trail offered to show where the withdrawals went.

Richard S Ehrlich is a Bangkok-based journalist who has reported news from Asia 
since 1978. His web page is http://www.asia-correspondent.110mb.com



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