Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Prayuth: PAD can rally, it’s their legal right

http://www.prachatai.com/english/node/2155

  Wednesday, 24 November 2010

Prayuth: PAD can rally, it's their legal right

Army Chief Gen Prayuth Chan-ocha said that the PAD had the legal right to hold rallies during Parliament's consideration of charter amendments as long as they did not use violence.  The Emergency Decree has to be kept in force until the situation returns to normal.  He insisted that there were never double standards regarding enforcement of the decree, and all groups had been treated equally, according to an ASTV-Manager report on 24 Nov.

He also said that the Director of the Centre for the Resolution of the Emergency Situation (CRES), Gen Prawit Wongsuwan, had already met with the Prime Minister to explain that the CRES order to ban merchandise which caused disunity was not meant to curtail the rights of the public, but was out of concern for offences against the monarchy.

Next PAD rally on 11 Dec

PAD leader Maj Gen Chamlong Srimuang told ASTV this morning that PAD supporters were coming from Lampang to join others in front of Parliament.  Those who came from the provinces and could not stay overnight with relatives or friends in Bangkok would be welcome to stay at the office of the New Politics Party where air conditioned rooms and toilets were available, and also at Santi Asoke.

He reiterated the PAD's stance of accepting charter amendments only after a referendum.

Parliament met last night until 1-2 am, but the PAD halted their rally at 10 pm so that their supporters could rest.

He said that late yesterday afternoon some senators, both appointed and elected, and MPs came out to meet the PAD supporters, and this showed that a number of parliamentarians agreed with the PAD.  They came out on their own, not by invitation.  They did not go up on stage however, as it might not be proper.

The wife of a former regional police commander and recently retired army generals also came to join the rally today, he said.

He said that the PAD had reasons for their protest.  They had had meeting after meeting.  The best they could do was to protest.

He expected that the rally would finish at 3 pm on 25 Nov, when the Parliamentary meeting was supposed to end.  However the voting turned out, the PAD will meet again to discuss what to do.

Chamlong said that this time they were saving their energy for their next rally on 11 Dec to protest the loss of Thai territory to Cambodia, when they would come in full force.    

On 11 Dec, a number of military officers, both in active service and retired, will join their rally, because it is about the protection of territory.  They will stay overnight to demand that the Prime Minister withdraw the 2000 MOU and the JBC meeting reports.  They will camp in front of the Ratchadamnoen Boxing Stadium.

At about 10 am today at the rally in front of Parliament, Ratchayut Sirayothinpakdi, the new name of Amornthep Amornrattananon, a former MP candidate for Bangkok for the New Politics Party, told the crowd that their rally was unlike those of the red shirts.  The red shirts had come out in numbers, but it was not clear whether they had acted out of their own conscience or whether they were organized and recruited by politicians and canvassers.  PAD supporters acted out of conscience. 

Comments

"PAD supporters acted out of conscience"

Claiming the moral high-ground the PAD quickly forget they only received a stunning 1.7% in the last poll before the Bangkok elections and, in the latter failed to win a single seat.

Considering how tiny their support base is in comparison to the clout they have (thanks to right wing and military support) I would suggest they look in the mirror and next time...

"act out of a bad conscience".

meaning, stay at home and tending to their gardens and polishing their statues and sabers (as opposed to rattling them)

calling for supporters from Lampang..... and they have to bribe them with free and inferior accommodation

what is the population of Bangkok and they only have about 1,000 attending

and where is the elites funding for their activities?

seems it is only Sondhi that will get benefit from advertising his ASTV media

poor old Chamlong should go back home and meditate on why he got involved in US Special Ops and where it has led him at the end of his life

Who exactly is Prayuth? Is he Thailand's new dictator? Is he making all the decisions now? What gives this stool pigeon for the junta the right to say what is "legal" and what is not.

Prayuth is only the chief of police, and as such it is his job to "apply" the law, not make it.

All I know is what I read in the papers :

Who exactly is Prayuth?
He is the Army Chief, as noted in line one of the story above. He is reported to be the leader of an "elite" Queens' Guard Regiment. He was directly responsible for the massacre of more than 80 Thais in April and May of 2010.
Is he Thailand's new dictator? Is he making all the decisions now?
Apparently he is Thailand's new dictator. He seems to be making all the decisions he wants to and leaving the rest to the military appointed 'civilian' government. This is 'Disciplined Democracy', Thai style.
What gives this stool pigeon for the junta the right to say what is "legal" and what is not.
Of course he has no 'right' to do so, but that's a 'technical detail' in Thailand. The PAD and the Democrat Party have given him the 'right' to say what is 'legal' and what is not. They did so when they gave him the 'right' to mow down the Thai people in broad daylight on the streets of the capital in order to avoid an election and to safeguard the PAD and Democrat Party's 'right' to appoint Prayuth dictator/strongman in the quiet coup of 1 October, 2010.

Prayuth is not the chief of police. Pol Gen Wichien Potephosree, the former head of the palace police, is the chief of police. Wichien sees his number one job to be the suppression of lèse majesté among the Thai people, who love their king.

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