Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Ji Ungpakorn on Tak Bai

Ji Ungpakorn on Tak Bai

Because access to Ji Ungpakorn’s sites are blocked in Thailand, PPT reproduces his post on this important topic

Takbai was a State Crime

Giles Ji Ungpakorn

The use of force to disperse and then capture unarmed demonstrators at Takbai in Southern Thailand on 25th October 2004 was a State Crime. The protestors were tied up and thrown on backs of army lorries, with people lying on top of one another 6-7 deep. They were then transported in the hot sun for hours to an army camp. The 78 people who died, along with the others who were shot, were deliberately murdered by the Thai State. The government of the time, the Army and the Police were responsible for this crime. Yet the Courts in Thailand have concluded that no officials “did anything wrong”.

Thailand has a history of State Crimes: 14th October 1973, 6th October 1976, May 1991, Takbai 2004, the War on Drugs and the latest killings in Bangkok in April 2009. These are all killings of unarmed civilians by Thai State security forces with the agreement of the government and the ruling elites. The Krue Sa mosque massacre in April 2004, where youths were executed in cold blood, is another terrible example. No official has ever been punished for these crimes and this sets a precedent for further abuses in the future.

The court ruling over Takbai is not surprising. The Thai Judiciary is neither just nor independent. There is no rule of law, only double standards. The Royalist Yellow Shirts who used violence and committed crimes remain unpunished, but pro-democracy Red Shirts are being prosecuted.

In Thailand it is OK for the State to kill citizens, but people who criticise the ruling order go to jail.

The State officials, Army and Judiciary hide behind a raft of ant-democratic laws: lese majeste, contempt of court, National Security and internet censorship laws. The present Prime Minister, Abhisit, is happy to tell lie after lie about the use of the law and that the government “upholds freedom of speech and democracy”. He is confident in his lies because all the mainstream media is under government and Royalist control.

For the Red Shirt movement, Takbai, Krue-Sa and the War on Drugs pose a challenge. We must admit the truth that these crimes took place under the Thaksin government. We must not have double standards. Red Shirts must use reasoned argument to build a democratic Thailand. In the future, any Red Shirt government must respect human rights.

But state crimes under Thaksin’s Thai Rak Thai government do not justify the 2006 military coup, the selective use of the courts, the illegal manoeuvring of the Democrats into power or the anti-democratic violence of the PAD Yellow Shirts. The Democrats, the Army and all the Royalists have blood on their hands too. They must be swept away in order to build a democratic society. Such a society will not come easily. The Royalists, including the Army, hold extra-Constitutional power. Therefore elections and small Constitutional changes will not be enough. We must build the Red Shirt movement into a strong Peoples’ Movement from below to oppose the authoritarian elites. It will take time, but the Old Order seems to be on its last legs. Their unquestioning loyalty to a hereditary Monarchy and their support for military coups lacks all democratic legitimacy. Some Royal advisors have praised the last Russian Czar and the PAD wants to adopt a North Korean economic model! These are signs of intellectual decay. It is time for a change in Thailand.

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