Military coup in Thailand!!

bd popeye

The Last Jedi
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Military coup in Thailand!

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Thai military launches coup, backs king By GRANT PECK, Associated Press Writer

11 minutes ago

BANGKOK, Thailand - The Thai military launched a coup against Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra on Tuesday night, circling his offices with tanks, seizing control of TV stations and declaring a provisional authority pledging loyalty to the king.

An announcement on Thai television declared that a "Council of Administrative Reform" with King Bhumibol Adulyadej as head of state had seized power in Bangkok and nearby provinces without any resistance.

Thaksin, who has faced calls to step down amid allegations of corruption and abuse of power, was in New York at the U.N. General Assembly, and he declared a state of emergency via a government-owned TV station.

At least 14 tanks surrounded Government House, Thaksin's office.

A convoy of four tanks rigged with loudspeakers and sirens rolled through a busy commercial district of Bangkok, warning people to get off the street for their own safety.

A senior military official, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the situation, said army Commander-in-Chief Gen. Sondhi Boonyaratkalin had used the military to take over power from the prime minister.

Massive rallies earlier this year forced Thaksin to dissolve Parliament and call an election in April, three years ahead of schedule. The poll was boycotted by opposition parties and later annulled by Thailand's top courts, leaving the country without a working legislature.

Thaksin's Thai Rak Thai Party twice won landslide election victories, in 2001 and 2005 and had been expected to win the next vote on Oct. 15, bolstered by its widespread support in the country's rural areas.

In March, Boonyaratkalin, sought to ease speculation that the military might join the political fray, as it last did in 1992 and more than a dozen other times during earlier crises.

"The army will not get involved in the political conflict. Political troubles should be resolved by politicians," Boonyaratkalin said at the time, echoing comments of other top military officials. "Military coups are a thing of the past."

Thaksin, who had been scheduled to address the U.N. General Assembly on Wednesday night, switched his speech to Tuesday at 7 p.m. EDT.

On Monday, Thaksin had said he may step down as leader of Thailand after the upcoming elections but would remain at the helm of his party, despite calls for him to give up the post.

In Bangkok, several hundred soldiers were deployed at government installations and major intersections, according to an Associated Press reporter.

Army-owned TV channel 5 interrupted regular broadcasts with patriotic music and showed pictures of the king. At least some radio and television stations monitored in Bangkok suspended programming.

The cable television station of the Nation newspaper reported that tanks were parked at the Rachadamnoen Road and royal plaza close to the royal palace and government offices.

"The prime minister with the approval of the cabinet declares serious emergency law in Bangkok from now on" Thaksin said by television from New York. He said he was ordering the transfer of the nation's army chief to work in the prime minister's office, effectively suspending him from his military duties.

Thaksin's critics want to jettison his policies promoting privatization, free trade agreements and CEO-style administration.

Opposition to Thaksin gained momentum in January when his family announced it had sold its controlling stake in telecommunications company Shin Corp. to Singapore's state-owned Temasek Holdings for a tax-free $1.9 billion. Critics allege the sale involved insider trading and complain a key national asset is now in foreign hands.

Thaksin also has been accused of stifling the media and mishandling a Muslim insurgency in southern Thailand that flared under his rule.

In Thailand's mostly Muslim south, separatist insurgents have waged a bloody campaign that has left at least 1,700 dead, mostly civilians, since 2004. Citizens there have complained of rights abuses by soldiers and discrimination by the country's Buddhist majority.

Bhumibol, a 78-year-old constitutional monarch with limited powers, has used his high prestige to pressure opposing parties to compromise during political crises. He is credited with helping keep Thailand more stable than many of its Southeast Asian neighbors.

He is the world's longest-serving monarch, celebrated his 60th year on the throne with lavish festivities in mid-June that were attended by royalty from around the world.

Many Thais are counting on him to pull the country through its current political crisis, which has left it with no functioning legislature and only a caretaker government after a divisive, inconclusive election.

Bhumibol was born in Cambridge, Mass. He became the ninth king of Thailand's Chakri dynasty on June 9, 1946, succeeding his older brother, Ananda, killed by an unexplained shooting.

Since then, the beloved king has reigned through a score of governments, democratic and dictatorial. He has taken an especially active role in rural development.

In 1992, demonstrators against a military strongman were gunned down before the king stepped in to end the fighting and usher in a period of stability.
 

Roger604

Senior Member
I suppose as members of a military forum we are supposed to back the uniformed generals in this particular conflict? :p
 
D

Deleted member 675

Guest
So the coup plotters have been off to see King Bhumibol Adulyadej. He has stood up for his people in the past and he has a lot of authority. Hopefully he will make sure Thailand's democracy survives this crisis - it would be horrible if the country went back to the bad old ways of coups and misery.
 
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bd popeye

The Last Jedi
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I posted this story because it came "out of the blue" Totally unexpected.
Intresting none the less..yahoo already has a slide show about the coup.

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So far the whole affair seems to be bloodless..I hope it stays that way
 

tphuang

Lieutenant General
Staff member
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I posted this story because it came "out of the blue" Totally unexpected.
Intresting none the less..yahoo already has a slide show about the coup.

Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!


So far the whole affair seems to be bloodless..I hope it stays that way

It will be interesting to see America's reaction to this. I think they will pick the democratic leader to support, but you never know.
 

Violet Oboe

Junior Member
That is bad news for China since Thaksin Shinawatra (a thai of chinese descent from northern Chiang Mai) had developed a very close relationship with China. Although he obviously played the hedging game with the US (e.g. he staunchly supported the US ´war on terror´ probably since Thailand suffers from a muslim insurgency in several southern provinces bordering Malaysia) China made good progress in extending her influence in Thailand during his era.

Thaksin was regarded by senior pro-US generals and the ultra-conservative King as far too rich, popular and powerful for being their susceptible puppet and had consequently to be removed.
Washington probably has known of the coup in advance and they will support the new junta because the generals will implement a predictable hundred percent subservient pro-US policy like it was the course for decades in the old days. As far as US interests of power and influence are concerned democracy and human rights are rather irrelevant as the instructive example of Pakistan´s military ruler Pervez Musharraf shows.
 

Spike

Banned Idiot
The main question now is what Thaksin loyalists in the army will do in response. Also, what happens if Thaksin's party wins again in the next election (as polls indicate it will)?
 

Finn McCool

Captain
Registered Member
As far as US interests of power and influence are concerned democracy and human rights are rather irrelevant as the instructive example of Pakistan´s military ruler Pervez Musharraf shows.

Yea, your right, I doubt that the US will come out to back either side in this which is of course tacit backing of the generals. Since they are probably pro-US, and Shinwatra didn't have a lot of credibility left. But I agree with Popeye, this was very unexpected. I just wonder if the military is actually going to restore a democratic government. I don't know anything about those in charge, or very much about Thailand's political situation, so I would say it's about 60:40 that things get back to normal without Thinwatra because the demonstrations against him have showed that the people demand democracy and aren't afraid to be noisy about it.

Is there anything that Thinwatra can do? Is he just stuck in the US?
 

Finn McCool

Captain
Registered Member
The military government just announced that there will be no elections until 2007. I think my 60-40 odds of a restoration of full democracy just went to to about 50-50.

I saw a photo essay on this on Yahoo, apparently the people are coming out into the streets and welcoming the soldiers, giving them lunch, putting flowers on their tanks and guns, etc. All of the photos were taken by real people, mostly tourists in Bangkok, so it wasn't provided by the military. Tourists are doing the same thing as the Thai people, their coming out into the streets and getting the pictures taken in front of the tanks and troops.

I wonder what the situation is in the country side? What's going on there? I wonder if the people from Thinwatra's party (officeholders) have been removed or what.
 
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