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BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTING!

Re: BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTI

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A Thai anti-government demonstrator watches non-protesters do early morning aerobics at a park next to the so-called "red shirt" protester's camp in Bangkok, Thailand Tuesday, May 4, 2010. Thailand's anti-government demonstrators said they will respond Tuesday to the prime minister's new proposal for early elections in exchange for ending their occupation of downtown Bangkok that has crippled the capital for weeks.​
 
Re: BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTI

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Thailand's Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva speaks to the media before attending a cabinet meeting at the 11th Infantry Regiment army base in Bangkok May 4, 2010. "Red shirt" protesters in Thailand will consider on Tuesday a proposal by Abhisit for an election on Nov. 14, aimed at ending a two-month political crisis in which 27 people have been killed.​
 
Re: BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTI

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Thai 'Red Shirt' anti-government protest leader Natthawut Saikua (C red), flanked by other protest leaders, makes an announcement on the latest proposal by Thai prime minister to hold elections in mid-November during a press conference held at the Red Shirts' fortified camp in the financial central district in downtown Bangkok on May 4, 2010. Thailand's 'Red Shirt' anti-government protest movement reacted cautiously to the prime minister's proposal to hold elections in mid-November as a way out of a crippling political crisis.​
 
Re: BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTI

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Thai 'Red Shirt' anti-government protest leader Veera Musikapong (R rear) sits with other leaders opposite Buddhist monks during a ceremony to mark the 60th Coronation Day of King Bhumibol Adulyadej, inside their fortified camp in the financial central district of Silom in downtown Bangkok on May 5, 2010. Musikapong expressed optimism that the protesters would soon end their weeks-long rally in Bangkok after they agreed to join a government reconciliation process.

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Thai 'Red Shirt' anti-government protest leader Veera Musikapong (R) and Weng Tojirakam (L) sit with other leaders opposite Buddhist monks as they pray during a ceremony to mark the 60th Coronation Day of King Bhumibol Adulyadej, inside their fortified camp in the financial central district of Silom in downtown Bangkok on May 5, 2010.​
 
Re: BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTI

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Thailand's revered King Bhumibol Adulyadej departs to the Grand Palace from Siriraj Hospital to take part in his coronation anniversary ceremonies in Bangkok, May 5, 2010. Following the King is (L-R) Crown Prince Maha Vajiralongkorn, Queen Sirikit and Princess Maha Chakri Sirindhorn.​
 
Re: BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTI

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Thai women hold portraits of Thailand's 82-year-old revered King Bhumibol Adulyadej as they wait for him to leave Siriraj hospital on Coronation Day in Bangkok May 5, 2010.

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Thailand's Crown Prince Maha Vajiralongkorn waves to well-wishers who had gathered to see King Bhumibol Adulyadej before he departed to the Grand Palace from Siriraj Hospital to take part in his coronation anniversary ceremonies in Bangkok, May 5, 2010.

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Thais gather near Sanam Luang park in Bangkok, Thailand, Wednesday, May 5, 2010, as a part of the Royal Motorcade passes on Coronation Day. The annual event remembers the day King Bhumibol Adulyadej was crowned King of Thailand in 1950.​
 
Re: BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTI

ทรงพระเจริญ
Long Live The King


A joke from the Redshirts :


Pinocchio, Superman and Snow White went out together. Along the way, they saw a sign announcing a beauty contest.

Snow White said: I shall enter this contest for the most beautiful girl in the world.

After half and hour, her friends asked her about the result.

Snow White said: "I was crowned Miss Universe (wow!)

The three friends walked further. They saw a sign announcing a competition for the strongest man in the world.

Superman said: "I shall enter this competition."

Half an hour later, his friends asked about the result.

Superman replied: "I surely won the trophy for the strongest man in the world." (wow!)

Then the three friends walked further. They saw a sign announcing a competition for the world's best liar.

Pinocchio said: "I shall enter this competition."

Half an hour later, Snow White and Superman asked Pinocchio about the result.

Pinoccchio spoke while crying: "Who is this Abhisit? Where is he from?"
 
Re: BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTI

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bottom pic: world most expensive wheelchair:eek:

top pic : world highest ranking cum best dressed wheelchair pushing military officer.:D
 
Re: BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTI

Thai protesters welcome PM's offer, want details

By GRANT PECK

BANGKOK — Protest leaders said they agreed in principle Tuesday with a government-proposed compromise to end Thailand's deadly political crisis, but refused to leave their camp in Bangkok's streets until details can be worked out.

Pressure on both sides to end the 8-week-old stalemate has grown in recent days, with the government fending off calls for a crackdown on the paralyzing protest and the anti-government "Red Shirts" attempting to recover from a public relations debacle caused by their raid of a hospital.

Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva had previously demanded that the protesters leave the streets before a compromise could be reached. But with damage to the economy and political stability growing, Abhisit went on nationwide television Monday night to present his plan for rescuing Thailand from the political morass in which it has been trapped since a 2006 military coup deposed Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra on corruption allegations.

The plan includes an offer of new elections on Nov. 14 — about a year before Abhisit's term would end — if the Red Shirts stop their protests.

Veera Musikapong, a Red Shirt leader, said after meeting with colleagues Tuesday that they "unanimously welcomed the reconciliation process" but did not commit themselves to abandoning their street demonstration.

"We're staying, but if an agreement could be reached easily and can stand, then I think we will leave soon," Weng Tojirakarn, another protest leader, told The Associated Press.

The Red Shirt demonstrators — consisting of supporters of Thaksin and others who believe the coup was a blow to democracy — accuse Abhisit of taking power illegitimately through back-room deals and military pressure on legislators. The protesters have been camped in Bangkok's streets since mid-March, demanding Abhisit dissolve Parliament and call new elections.

Clashes with soldiers and other violence have cost 27 lives and left almost 1,000 people hurt.

Abhisit said his five-point plan takes into account the protesters' main grievances. It includes respect for the monarchy, reforms to resolve economic injustice, free but responsible media to be overseen by an independent watchdog agency, independent investigations of violent incidents connected with the protests, and amendment of the constitution to be more fair to all political parties.

The Red Shirts have called on the government to clarify some details. There was no immediate response from the government.

The timing of the dissolution has been a crucial issue, and the Red Shirts rejected Abhisit's earlier offer to dissolve Parliament by the end of the year. Abhisit has said he wants enough time in office to pass a national budget for next year. But both sides also want to be in control when a key reshuffle of top military posts occurs in September so they can influence the outcome.

Some of the Red Shirts' influential backers have signaled their support for the proposal, suggesting the standoff could end by Wednesday, a royal holiday.

Thaksin said in a phone call to reporters that Coronation Day — which marks the day revered King Bhumibol Adulyadej was officially crowned — should mark a positive new beginning and the end of fighting among Thais.

"If there is going to be a good beginning for reconciliation, that's a good thing. But everyone must not try to take petty political advantages," he said from exile abroad, where he is avoiding a two-year prison sentence for corruption.

Chavalit Yongchaiyuth, chairman of the opposition Pheu Thai party allied with Thaksin, praised the prime minister's plan. Speaking before the Red Shirt leaders responded to the proposal, he said he believed the protest would end Wednesday and "all sides will cooperate to bring the country back to peace."

A previous attempt last month at resolving the conflict through two days of televised talks between Abhisit and Red Shirt leaders was unsuccessful. In the past two weeks, private talks have been held, while government security forces have kept up pressure on the demonstrators with a show of strength in downtown Bangkok.

At the same time, the Red Shirts suffered a publicity debacle last week when a large group of them barged into a hospital next to their protest camp to search for soldiers they believed were hiding there. Public revulsion at the action was fanned by pro-government media.

The Red Shirts said Tuesday they want the government to cease blocking their media. The government has tried to stop a Red Shirt satellite TV station from broadcasting and blocked scores of websites seen as sympathetic to the protesters.

They also called on the government to cease linking them to an alleged violent anti-monarchy movement. Accusations of disloyalty to the king are political poison in Thailand.

Even if the protesters reach agreement with Abhisit, the prime minister might face opposition from his own side. Chuan Leekpai, a former prime minister and elder statesman in Abhisit's Democrat Party, said he disagreed with dissolving Parliament under threat.

A similar position is held by the royalist People's Alliance for Democracy, whose anti-Thaksin protests in 2006 helped set the stage for the coup. To oppose two pro-Thaksin prime ministers in 2008, the group occupied the prime minister's offices for three months and took over Bangkok's two airports for a week.

The Red Shirts' response to Abhisit's plan "is a positive sign," said Viengrat Nethipo, a political scientist at Bangkok's Chulalongkorn University.

"Abhisit was trying to find an exit for both sides even though neither gets everything they want," she said. "There are no winners or losers."

Associated Press writers Thanyarat Doksone, Jocelyn Gecker, Ravi Nessman and Denis D. Gray contributed to this report.
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5g3j-vAVG1fg3kEfnogTiH8_4EXvwD9FG6T7O0


------------------------

CONSTITUTION OF THE KINGDOM OF THAILAND
Part2 : The House of Representatives

Section 108.
The King has the prerogative to dissolve the House of Representatives for a new election of members of the House.

The dissolution of the House of Representatives shall be made in the form of a Royal Decree in which the day
for a new general election must be fixed for not less than forty-five days but not more than sixty days as from the day
the House of Representatives has been dissolved and such election day must be the same throughout the Kingdom.

The dissolution of the House of Representatives may be made only once under the same circumstance.
 
Re: BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTI


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Thailand's Crown Prince Maha Vajiralongkorn escorts Queen Sirikit out of Siriraj Hospital to mark revered Thai King Bhumibol Adulyadej's coronation anniversary at the Grand Palace in Bangkok May 5, 2010. Following Queen Sirikit is (L-R) Royal Consort Princess Srirasmi, Princess Ubol Ratana and Princess Maha Chakri Sirindhorn.

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Thailand's revered King Bhumibol Adulyadej and Queen Sirikit take part in Coronation Day ceremonies at the Grand Palace in Bangkok May 5, 2010.

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Thailand's revered King Bhumibol Adulyadej and Queen Sirikit take part in Coronation Day ceremonies at the Grand Palace in Bangkok on May 5, 2010.


 
Re: BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTI

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The Royal Thai armed forces parade past the Grand Palace to mark revered Thai King Bhumibol Adulyadej's coronation anniversary in Bangkok May 5, 2010.​
 
Re: BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTI

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Long Live The King

Long Rows of empty seats
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The interior of a nearly empty cabin on a Singapore Airlines flight to Singapore is pictured just before take off from Bangkok May 5, 2010. Occupancy rates in hotels in Bangkok, the Thai capital that has been the scene of violent clashes between anti-government protesters and security forces, have dipped sharply in the last month as tourist numbers have fallen. Tourism accounts for six percent of Thailand's gross domestic product and employs 1.8 million people directly. Photo taken May 5, 2010.​
 
Re: BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTI

Reds to stay put, for now


By The Nation
Published on May 6, 2010
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Secret negotiations stall over amnesty for banned politicians; DAAD wants details of plan before ending protest


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<!-- Google Dtail Ads --> The red shirts yesterday said they would continue their protest in the Rajprasong business area until they obtained all the details of Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva's road map for national reconciliation.

They want this to include an amnesty from all charges and a clear stance <leo_highlight style="border-bottom: 2px solid rgb(255, 255, 150); background-color: transparent; background-image: none; background-repeat: repeat; background-attachment: scroll; background-position: 0% 50%; -moz-background-size: auto auto; cursor: pointer; display: inline; -moz-background-clip: -moz-initial; -moz-background-origin: -moz-initial; -moz-background-inline-policy: -moz-initial;" id="leoHighlights_Underline_0" onclick="leoHighlightsHandleClick('leoHighlights_Underline_0')" onmouseover="leoHighlightsHandleMouseOver('leoHighlights_Underline_0')" onmouseout="leoHighlightsHandleMouseOut('leoHighlights_Underline_0')" leohighlights_keywords="on%20the%20road" leohighlights_url_top="http%3A//shortcuts.thebrowserhighlighter.com/leonardo/plugin/highlights/3_1/tbh_highlightsTop.jsp?keywords%3Don%2520the%2520road%26domain%3Dwww.nationmultimedia.com" leohighlights_url_bottom="http%3A//shortcuts.thebrowserhighlighter.com/leonardo/plugin/highlights/3_1/tbh_highlightsBottom.jsp?keywords%3Don%2520the%2520road%26domain%3Dwww.nationmultimedia.com" leohighlights_underline="true">on the road</leo_highlight> map from the ruling Democrat Party and its coalition partners.

"The government still poses a threat to us while the prime minister talks about reconciliation," said red leader Natthawut Saikua.

Reconciliation cannot happen in this tense atmosphere, he said.

"Even militants in the restive South have never been charged with terrorism. May I ask why the government charged nine red leaders as terrorists?" he asked. "Prime Minister Abhisit should take time to reconsider this matter."

The hope of seeing the red protest end on Coronation Day dissolved yesterday as both sides were unable to settle many differences in secret negotiations.

The red shirts wanted the government to map out details of the reconciliation plan and give a specific date for dissolution of Parliament.

Democrat MP Sirichoke Sopha yesterday said it was unnecessary to set the date for dissolution, as the November 14 poll day obviously meant the House would have to be dissolved between September 15 and 30, in accordance with the Constitution.

The charter stipulates an election must be held within 45-60 days of House dissolution. But the red shirts still want an official announcement, because they need time to wind down their protest.

Amnesty was also a key point, as the government will likely agree to grant amnesty for all political charges, including the five-year ban imposed on 111 politicians in 2007 and 109 politicians in 2008. However, it disagreed with the idea of overlooking criminal charges, including terrorism and lese majeste, a source close to the negotiation said.

The red-shirt leaders earlier said in public that they did not need amnesty for their criminal charges but wanted equal treatment with others in the government and the rival yellow shirts.

Coalition parties in a meeting with Deputy Prime Minister Suthep Thaugsuban on Tuesday evening backed the idea of an amnesty, as many of their key leaders have been banned from politics.

Another leader, weng Tojirakarn, said the red shirts also had a five-point plan for the government to follow. They are:

- Lift <leo_highlight style="border-bottom: 2px solid rgb(255, 255, 150); background-color: transparent; background-image: none; background-repeat: repeat; background-attachment: scroll; background-position: 0% 50%; -moz-background-size: auto auto; cursor: pointer; display: inline; -moz-background-clip: -moz-initial; -moz-background-origin: -moz-initial; -moz-background-inline-policy: -moz-initial;" id="leoHighlights_Underline_1" onclick="leoHighlightsHandleClick('leoHighlights_Underline_1')" onmouseover="leoHighlightsHandleMouseOver('leoHighlights_Underline_1')" onmouseout="leoHighlightsHandleMouseOut('leoHighlights_Underline_1')" leohighlights_keywords="the%20state" leohighlights_url_top="http%3A//shortcuts.thebrowserhighlighter.com/leonardo/plugin/highlights/3_1/tbh_highlightsTop.jsp?keywords%3Dthe%2520state%26domain%3Dwww.nationmultimedia.com" leohighlights_url_bottom="http%3A//shortcuts.thebrowserhighlighter.com/leonardo/plugin/highlights/3_1/tbh_highlightsBottom.jsp?keywords%3Dthe%2520state%26domain%3Dwww.nationmultimedia.com" leohighlights_underline="true">the state</leo_highlight> of emergency

- Send security forces back to their barracks

- End the propaganda against the protesters

- Let red media back on air and online

- End cooking up evidence for the charges against the protesters.
"Not only do the red shirts need to consider the government's road map, but the government also needs to consider our plan," Natthawut said.

The red shirts want the ruling Democrat Party to make the proposed road map clear to its members. Abhisit, as leader of the party, seems to have a difference of opinion with the party' chief adviser, Chuan Leekpai, who says he disagrees with Parliament's dissolution, Natthawut said.

The Democrat Party also may have some difficulties with the coalition parties over the constitutional amendments, as the ruling party does not want to rewrite the charter.

A large number of Democrat MPs from Bangkok and the South have been bombarded by angry calls from their constituents, protesting against the road map for reconciliation.

Sources in the main coalition party said the anger was due to a perceived U-turn to organise the fresh elections even though Prime Minister Abhisit had confirmed a snap poll would not take place before nine months.

"Several Democrat constituents are not happy about the hasty move to move the poll date forward," a party source said.

All 37 Democrat MPs from Bangkok have received angry phone calls regarding Abhisit's decision to bow to the red shirts' demand for dissolution of Parliament.

Many said they wanted to see the law upheld when dealing with the unruly crowds and that they saw no justification in organising the elections under pressure.

Party sources said the Democrats would listen to Abhisit explain himself today before deciding their next move.
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Re: BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTI

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Fireworks explode over Royal Plaza and a portrait of Thailand's 82-year-old King Bhumibol Adulyadej during the anniversary of his coronation in Bangkok May 5, 2010. Little movement in the peace process is likely on Wednesday, with neither side wanting to be seen as disrespectful to Thailand's revered monarch on Coronation Day, a public holiday.​
 
Re: BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTI

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Rush hour traffic moves slowly past a red shirt camp barrier blocking a major road for another day on May 6, 2010 in Bangkok, Thailand. The red shirts have accepted the road map for reconciliation under four conditions, their leader Veera Musigapong said today but they have not stated when they are leaving the camp. Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva vows to dissolve Parliament between September 15 and 30 to end Thailand's eight weeks of political crisis but for now the red shirts say they will stay on the streets. The anti-government protests that have closed much of central Bangkok's commercial district.​
 
Re: BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTI

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Armed protesters patrol outside the anti-government "Red Shirt" encampment, Thursday, May 6, 2010, in Bangkok, Thailand. Thailand's prime minister said Thursday he would dissolve Parliament in September, meeting a key demand of anti-government protesters, but only if they end their crippling occupation of Bangkok's commercial district.

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A Thai woman walks next to a barricade built by 'Red-Shirt' anti-goverment protesters at their fortified camp in the financial central district in downtown Bangkok on May 6, 2010
 
Re: BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTI

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Chamlong Srimuang, one of the leaders of rival "yellow shirt" protest group, helds a group news conference in Bangkok May 6, 2010. The "yellow shirts", whose occupation of Bangkok's airport in late 2008 helped bring down a Thaksin-allied government, harshly criticized the reconciliation plan, saying it was a "betrayal to the public."

The prime minister has reconciled with terrorists by planning to dissolve the House. It's extremely bad for the country and the monarchy.
– Chamlong Srimuang
SOURCE: Haveeru Daily Online

 
Re: BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTI

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No wonder she is hot water...
Excerpt translated from her book :
Secrets, Trickery, and Camouflage: The Improbable Phenomena
Reviewed by Craig J. Reynolds

Soldiers, guns and coups have played a big role in Thailand’s politics for centuries. Historians think that the Front Palace incident in 1874 early in the reign of the fifth Bangkok king was actually a coup attempt backed by nobles and princes who stood to lose out if the young King Chulalongkorn proceeded with his reforms. Many coups, such as the one in September 2006, have succeeded, but there is no guarantee of success as several coup planners in the 1980s discovered. The country’s annals are littered with failed and aborted coups, and false alarms.

Seizing power by coup is a dangerous game. A coup that fails can result in disgrace or demotion, and even jail or death, so the plotters need to plan meticulously. The loyalties of key divisional commanders need to be secured. Inside knowledge of the itineraries of the head of government and his most loyal supporters is invaluable, and the reactions of the palaces need to be anticipated. The leader of the coup group also must assess whether or not he has ‘the right stuff’ to be prime minister. He also needs to identify rivals who might seriously challenge his leadership.

Timing is critical, and luck is a big factor. For advice on bringing off a coup successfully, military officers scrambling for rank and power consult astrologers. The incumbent monarch is the ninth Bangkok king, so the 9s in the date of the latest coup – the nineteenth day of the ninth month of B. E. 2549 – suggest an astrologer’s connivance on timing. The generals’ wives, who have time on their hands, may play a key role by searching out forecasts from lay and monastic astrologers on behalf of their husbands. The astrologers feed the egos and stoke the ambitions of their clients, always useful for retaining the confidence of men who aspire to high office. In the last two successful coups in 1991 and 2006, the astrologer who had advised the chief coup planner became the astrologer for the coup group once it had assumed power. In 1991 it was Kengkat Chongchaiphra, and in 2006 it was the Chiang Mai-based Warin Buawiratloet.

To prepare for national leadership certain steps can be taken to enhance prospects. The astrologer may recommend that his client increase his store of merit with appropriate rituals. Sixteen has been an auspicious number for army chiefs, so the spellings of names are twigged to make up the requisite sixteen characters, including superscript and subscript vowels and tone marks. Sometimes personal and family names are changed to ‘reverse’ bad karma or to designate a martial vocation. Did General Arthit Kamlang-ek’s parents really name him ‘The Sun Deity Preeminent Force’? Fire is cleansing, so soldiers changing their names burn some of their hair and nail clippings along with their old name to ritually dispose of their former selves.

The astrologers acquire confidential information that may be leaked to the media and thus contribute to an atmosphere of public apprehension and uncertainty. Rumours serve strategic ends by testing the reaction of key institutions and power blocs. For an important military player merely to be seen visiting an astrologer can stir rumours. During the turmoil of late 2008 when rumours circulated of a possible coup, General Anuphong Phaochinda, then head of the army, avoided visiting Warin, the astrologer of the 2006 coup group. Anuphong’s unwillingness to quell the violence instigated by the People’s Alliance for Democracy (PAD) and his refusal to resign after fatalities caused by the use of tear gas in suppressing protests indicated not weakness or conspiracy with the PAD or one of the palaces, but the management of risk. Anuphong stood to lose a great deal if the coup went ahead and ultimately failed. He did not want to risk his career by acting and failing.

Senior military officers are graduates of the Chulachomklao Royal Military Academy founded on 5 August 1887 by King Chulalongkorn who is addressed as Royal Father or Grandfather of the school. Within the academy’s grounds is an image of Chulalongkorn before which the cadets daily swear to protect the king’s legacy and defend the throne and the nation with their life’s blood. Whenever graduates of the academy encounter an image of this monarch, such as the equestrian statues located throughout the country, they commune with the image, renew their vows of loyalty, and pray to the deceased king for his blessing and success in their ventures. Throughout their careers, military officers reach out for the sacred and mysterious powers of the academy’s patron saint.

Consider these numbers. August was the birth month of four prime ministers of Thailand who came from the army: Field Marshal Thanom Kitikhachorn (11th); General Sujinda Kraprayoon (6th); General Prem Tinsulanond (26th); and General Surayut Chulanon (28th). Other high-ranking generals who have played key roles in the nation’s politics recently and who were born in August include Sunthorn Khongsompong (1st), Mongkol Amphornphisit (10th), Chettha Thanajaro (23rd), and Arthit Kamlang-ek (31st). Banharn Silpa-archa, who was prime minister from 1995-1996 , was ‘officially’ born on 19 August (real birth date, 20 July), and Abhisit Vejjajiva, the present prime minister, was born on 3 August. Anan Panyarachun, who was a cooperative choice for prime minister when the army needed a quick fix to restore its tattered reputation after the disastrous May 1992 killings in the streets of Bangkok, was born on 9 August. Some astrology manuals stretch the August sign into late July, in which case Chuan Leekpai and Thaksin Shinawatra, born on 28 and 26 July respectively, join the group.

The statistic is striking. The tempting conclusion is that birth in August is auspicious for Thai army officers who thus have an advantage over competitors for promotion. Their celestial sign is linked to the August founding of the Chulachomklao Royal Military Academy, and for this reason they receive favourable treatment in appointment to rank. Three civilian prime ministers – or five, if we include the late July births – may also have benefited from this convergence by reassuring key power blocs that the country would prosper during their stewardship.

Another bulwark of the military establishment is the Ministry of Defence, the Kalahom, whose offices were constructed more than 120 years ago by General Surasakmontri (Joem Saeng Xuto, 1851-1931). The building is located near the city pillar across the road from the Temple of the Emerald Buddha, the spiritual heart of the kingdom. Within the ministry are several shrines, including a timber post that has been weeping resin since the end of the absolute monarchy in 1932. A female tree spirit dwells in the post, which the soldiers dress with green cloth and where they make offerings and vows. The minister of defence and his deputy who occupy the Kalahom offices go about their work amidst these sacred sites with grave responsibilities weighing on them. If they should err or act dishonestly, their lives will be in danger.

Between the Kalahom building and the road are 42 cannons, a kind of open-air museum of Thai military prowess. Iconic maps on bronze plates allow passers-by to identify the name and location of each cannon on display. One of the more famous cannons, Phya Tani, has been a bone of contention with the people of Pattani who want it returned to their province (illustration). Because Phya Tani is an emblem of the national government’s sometimes precarious sovereignty in the south, this request is unlikely to be granted in the near future. All the cannons belong to the national patrimony and enjoy heritage listing, as a former minister of defence discovered when he proposed moving the cannons elsewhere and the Department of Fine Arts objected.

Until 2004, the 42 cannons pointed toward the Grand Palace and the Temple of the Emerald Buddha. In June of that year General Chettha Thanajaro, then the minister of defence, ordered the cannons swung around to face in the opposite direction. The order was said to have originated from ‘on high’, possibly to counter the symbolic threat to the sacred precincts across the road. It was ominous that the big Phya Tani cannon pointed towards the palace and royal temple in light of the troubles in the south such as the theft of weapons there early in 2004 and the violent suppression of young Muslim activists in April who had occupied the Krue Sae mosque in Pattani. One rumour held that former Prime Minister Thaksin had given the order to reverse the cannons. Another rumour was that the deputy minister of defence, a protégé of General Prem, was responsible. In any case, once repositioned, the cannon muzzles now pointed directly at the Kalahom, not very auspicious for the defence personnel working there! So the cannons were repositioned yet again to point sideways as they are today, parallel to the road and away from the sacred precincts and the Kalahom.

In Thailand the past haunts the present in many ways. A remarkable number of bureaucrats, soldiers, politicians, and business people believe themselves to be reincarnations of historical persons. King Naresuan, who restored Siamese sovereignty by defeating the Burmese in the late sixteenth century, and the military personnel around him are particular favourites in the contemporary moment. King Taksin’s achievement of restoring Siamese sovereignty (ku chat) in the late eighteenth century has also made his reign popular in this respect. General Sonthi Bunyaratkalin was said to be a reincarnation of one of King Taksin’s stalwart soldiers. Thus Sonthi’s role in leading the 2006 coup was ordained by his past life, because he was redressing the harm done to the kingdom by Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra who had disposed of the country’s wealth by selling his family company, Shin Corporation, to foreign interests without paying tax. Thaksin needed to be removed from office in order to redeem the country.

Foreigners tend to think of astrology, numerology, necromancy, and reincarnation as exotic beliefs that liven up the Thai scene. Political observers tend to think of these matters as an entertaining sideshow designed to divert a credulous public from the real game being played in the barracks and the safe houses of the capital. Wassana Nanuam, who covers military affairs for the Bangkok Post, thinks otherwise. She believes that the struggles in Thailand since 2006 have been not just about political power, money, or the muzzle of the gun, but about the supernatural. In the course of her reporting, Wassana has interviewed many high-ranking generals and other national leaders as well as the astrologers who advise them. Her interpretation of the evidence is sufficiently canny for some big-shot soldiers – or bik thahan, as the journalists refer to the army’s heavy hitters – to be wary of contact with her lest she discover too much about the way they go about their business. Many of her conversations with the bik thahan must be off the record, but she has earned the respect of her military informants because of her discretion and even-handed treatment of sensitive matters.

From early in 2006 Thai leaders have been engaged in a ‘war of magic’ (saiyasat), and in the second half of the book, Wassana narrows the focus to the increasingly personal conflict between former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra and Sondhi Limthongkul, leader of the PAD. Thaksin’s audacious use of the Temple of the Emerald Buddha in April 2005 sent jitters through elite circles and the defence forces. The founding of Thaksin’s Thai Rak Thai party on Bastille Day, commemorating the French revolution, augured an even grander design. As Thaksin’s star faded, Myanmar astrologers were made famous when a small Burmese woman with shortened limbs known as ET, reputedly the astrologer of Senior General Than Shwe, became popular with the Shinawatra family, especially Thaksin’s wife, Photjaman. These actions of Thaksin spooked the opposition, and Sonthi responded in kind, for example, in the wanton destruction of the Brahma shrine at government house when it was occupied by his supporters in late 2008.

Such is the trickery and camouflage reported in Wassana’s book. She has pieced together a jigsaw puzzle of rivalries and relationships, networks and alliances, and power blocs in the army and the political parties to make a compelling case for how the sciences of prognostication, divination and the dark arts of spells and curses motivate the behaviour of civilian and military leaders. For help in hedging risk, dealing with uncertainty, and nudging history in a favourable direction, civilians and soldiers alike consult custodians of this knowledge. As the Thai saying goes, ‘if you don’t believe in it, don’t disparage it’. Just to play it safe.



http://asiapacific.anu.edu.au/newmandala/2009/11/06/review-of-wassana/
 
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