Thai red shirts seek to woo Bangkok | |||||||||||||||||
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Ten of thousands of opposition supporters have paraded across Bangkok, the Thai capital, in an attempt to encourage the city's residents to support their calls for the government to step down. "We succeeded on our caravan today. We were warmly received and welcomed by Reds and also many people of other coloured shirts," Nattawut Saikur, one of the leaders of the red shirt movement, said. Abhisit came to power, with army backing, through a December 2008 parliamentary vote after a controversial court ruling removed allies of Thaksin Shinawatra, the ousted former premier.
On Friday before the march, Thaksin addressed his supporters via a video link-up, saying: "Fellow Bangkokians, send any kind of signals, wave a red flag, give some water, so that our red shirts can feel at ease. "I apologise for the traffic congestion lately and there will be more traffic jams when we march. "When I return, [I promise] 10 lines of electric trains from Bangkok to the surrounding provinces." "They came to cheer us from all walks of life. They gave water and food to us. Just seeing them come out made me happy," she said. "They all want democracy back."
Pitch Pongsawat, a political scientist at Chulalongkorn University, said that many Bangkok residents sympathised with the movement, but did not support Thaksin, who has been convicted of abuse of power and corruption while in exile. "These people are ambivalent because of the stigma of Thaksin," he said. "The Thai media is their obstacle, it portrays the 'red shirts' as blind followers of Thaksin, which means if you join them, you approve of Thaksin." On Sunday, the red shirts plan to follow the march by producing a giant paiting from their own blood. They plan to unfurl a giant white cloth on which supporters will be invited to paint pictures, scrawl poems and express political statements. "The theme of this artwork will be the history of the people's fight for democracy," Jatuporn said. "My question is: What is the standpoint of the 'red shirts'? Democracy or Thaksin? If answer is democracy, we can talk," he told Channel 3 television. | |||||||||||||||||
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The Democracy-Loving Thai Association of Illinois, U.S.A., (ชมรมผู้รักประชาธิปไตยไทยแห่งรัฐอิลลินอยส์, สหรัฐอเมริกา)
Saturday, March 20, 2010
Thai red shirts seek to woo Bangkok
http://english.aljazeera.net/news/asia-pacific/2010/03/2010320161948138308.html
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