Category: Thailand
Recent Thailand stories
Some recent Thailand stories of note:
- Thailand Targets Protests’ Financial Backing — WSJ
- Thailand Attracts Investment Despite Turmoil — NYT/IHT
- Thailand opens hotline for crisis suggestions — ABC News/AFP
- Thai government wines and dines ‘best friends’ (AP)
- Thailand Has `Upside’ Potential as Tourism Rebounds, Finance Minister Says — Bloomberg
- US House urges peaceful end to Thai crisis — AFP ((The text of the bill can be seen on the Library of Congress web site here. And here are the results of the vote.))
- Analysis: Thoughts on Thailand’s Turmoil, by James Stent — Poppy Field Journal
I spent several hours at Bangkok’s Klong Prem Central Prison yesterday, where the “World Cup 2010 Behind Bars” kicked off. It was a truly uplifting event.
The tournament is modeled on the actual World Cup, with foreign and Thai inmates competing for a gold colored replica of the World Cup trophy.
In yesterday’s opening match, South Africa played Mexico — just as the two nations will square off later today, in the World Cup’s first game ((More on the real World Cup soon. I am highly excited.)).
There were cheering spectators. There were dancers. There was confetti. There was even a marching band. The prisoners with whom I spoke were all, understandably, delighted with the competition.
Here’s the story I wrote for AFP.
UPDATE: Here’s the full text of the story.
Here are a few news stories that have caught my eye since the events of May 19 here in Bangkok. ((As a reminder, here are my images of the Rajaprasong intersection aftermath.))
As ever, a link is not an endorsement, but these should provide some interesting reading. And as I recently asked on Twitter, if you’ve seen a single news story or other work of journalism that you think does an especially good job of illustrating Thailand’s political crisis, please let me know.
I welcome feedback — newley at gmail dot com — and comments below. ((I may not be able to reply to all email, but I certainly try. Also, regarding comments, I generally only approve comments here that I feel add to the conversation in a constructive way.))
- The End of Brand Thailand [Newsweek, June 4].
- How Thailand Can Avoid a New Insurgency [TIME, May 27].
- Bangkok Proves Perilous to Journalists [WSJ, May 25]. And don’t miss the accompanying video.
- The Spring of Thailand’s Ethnic Discontent (Note: This story appears to be subscriber-only.) [WSJ, May 24]
- Thai Violence Exposes Social Division Widened by Thaksin Ouster [Bloomberg, May 23].
- Thaksin Still Stands Amid Thai Turmoil [WSJ, May 21].
(Thanks to BP for pointing to many of these items.)
Images from Rajaprasong
I’ve been out and about around Rajaprasong today surveying the cleanup efforts following Wednesday’s events.
Army troops are disassembling abandoned red shirt tents, while fire fighters have been spraying water on a smoldering section of Central World.
I’ll share more images later, but for now you can have a look at the photos I’ve been posting via Twitter.
Yesterday, May 19, army troops stormed the red shirt camp, breaking up anti-government demonstrations that had lasted for more than two months here in Bangkok.
Soldiers first destroyed the red shirt barricades in Silom ((See this post for images of the aftermath of earlier violence in Silom.)) with armored personnel carriers. Then the troops pressed north on Rajadamri toward the Rajaprasong camp ((See this post for images of the Rajaprasong red shirt camp in previous weeks.)), securing Lumphini Park and coming under fire from armed men clad in black.
Red shirt leaders soon surrendered to police, and the army eventually secured the entire protest site. Later, red shirt protesters would set scores of buildings on fire: the Stock Exchange of Thailand, CentralWorld shopping mall, two banks, a TV station, and more.
Some protesters who took refuge from the army crackdown sheltered in a nearby temple. Here’s a Globe and Mail story about people there — including the journalist who penned the piece — coming under fire throughout the night.
The day began with speculation that an army operation was imminent. The day ended with a deserted Rajaprasong protest site and plumes of smoke on the horizon.
At least 12 people were killed. Unrest also spread to the country’s northeast, but things now seem relatively calm here in Bangkok.
For a recap of the day’s events, here’s a good NYT story and blog post with video from the northeast.
Also, here’s a BBC story called “What Next for Thailand?” And for some moving — and very graphic — images, see this post at Boston.com’s The Big Picture.
My day started at 5 a.m., when I learned that army troops had taken up positions around the red shirt camp in the pre-dawn hours. So I quickly headed in that direction. I stopped at Phloenchit Rd., where I noticed a gathering of soldiers. (Note: please excuse the low-quality mobile phone images.)
Dozens of camouflage clad troops armed with rifles had established a checkpoint here. They had set up sandbags and took up positions in the Phloenchit BTS station.
Most of the troops were focused on an area further down the road, where the easternmost red shirt barricade was located. But at one point I ducked around the side of a gas station and was surprised to see to soldiers staring up into surrounding buildings with binoculars.
It became clear to me that the fighting was happening on the southern end of the protest site, near the red shirt barricade near Silom and Lumphini Park, and that these troops were merely holding their position, not planning to enter Rajaprasong.
So I walked along Phloenchit to the Rajaprasong main stage area. Along the way, I talked to a few red shirt “guards” manning the barricades. They said they were aware that the army was surrounding the protest zone, but they didn’t seem overly concerned. They told me that they believed that there were snipers in the high rise buildings near the Wireless Rd. and Langsuan Rd. intersections.
Here’s what the barricade looked like:
At the main protest site, several hundred meters further along the road, demonstrators gathered and listened to speeches. But there were fewer protesters than in days past. Still, men and women — a few of them with children — milled about as if it were any other day at the demonstration site.
Some red shirt supporters watched Thai TV coverage of the army buildup at the southern end of the protest site.
After hearing reports that the army was advancing up Rajadamri Rd., I made my way away from the stage, heading back to the east along Phloenchit. Red shirt supporters were still congregating in an area behind the barricades.
A tire was smoldering from an earlier fire.
Motorcycle taxi drivers — either red shirt supporters, opportunistic entrepreneurs, or both — were hanging out here, ferrying people around.
I traveled further east and soon noticed smoke rising from the Asoke junction, one of Bangkok’s busiest intersections. Reports suggested that a bus or a pile of tires — or both — had been lit on fire here.
There was also a thick plume of smoke coming from the Rama IV area, to the south. I would later learn that arsonists had torched the Channel 3 building. The fire raged for hours.
And later I saw smoke coming from the west. This was likely from the CentralWorld fire.
The government then announced a curfew from 8 p.m. until 6 a.m.
I was out along Sukhumvit Rd. briefly during this time and it was a very strange scene: virtually no traffic on what is typically one of the Thai capital’s most congested avenues. There were just a handful of pedestrians; there were long stretches of darkness; and there was very little noise.
Here’s the full Flickr photoset of my images.
For ongoing information, you can consult my lists of Thailand Twitterers and Bangkok journalists. And, of course, you can follow me on Twitter here.
Obviously, many questions remain. What will happen to the red shirt leaders — and the red shirt movement? Will there be more fires? Or shootings? What does the military operation mean for the future of Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva’s government?
Stay tuned.
Will write more soon. I’ve been tweeting pics and text throughout the day, of course. Stay tuned.
The latest news on the red shirt protests here in Bangkok is this: The army continues to enforce its blockade of the protest zone at Rajaprasong, in the center of the city. And demonstrators continue to attack the soldiers’ positions.
Here’s a recent AP story on failed talks between red leaders and the government.
I can now hear, off in the distance, pops and bangs coming from the Rama IV and Silom areas of the city, to the south of the protest site. This is, among other locations, where many of the clashes have occurred. Whether these sounds are from fireworks or gunfire is unclear to me.
In addition to other weapons, red shirts have been firing firecrackers and bottle rockets at the soldiers, and the army has been defending their positions with live fire.
For more on the situation, here’s a BBC gallery of images, and here are some photos at TIME.com from photographer James Nachtwey.
Also, this Atlantic piece sums up what’s happening in Thailand. And for an essay about the recent violence, I suggest checking out this NYT piece by Tom Fuller, who was near “Seh Daeng” when the rogue army general was shot last week.
On to the images.
I snapped most of these about five hours ago today (Tues.), just after 6 p.m. local time. I spent some time at the Rajaprasong stage — here’s what the crowd looked like at about 5:30 p.m. The numbers here have fallen over the past few days.
Standing from a barrier that the red shirts have constructed on Phloenchit Rd. to my right, here’s the view of Langsuan Rd.
Looking up Chidlom Rd.
Looking up Phloenchit toward a second red shirt barrier on Wireless Rd. I was unable to identify the source of the smoke.
A hastily snapped image of a barricade on Phetburi Rd. There has also been fighting in this area.
Another barrier on Phetburi Rd.
Approaching an army checkpoint on Phetburi Rd. and Nana.
Past the army checkpoint.
All of these images are in the full Flickr photoset.
As I noted at the time on Twitter, I later noticed that soldiers have set up a checkpoint with sandbags in the median of Phloenchit, near Mahatun Plaza.
More soon…