Thursday, January 27, 2011
Thai Government Again Besieged by Protesters
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| A supporter of the People's Alliance for Democracy, or the Yellow Shirts, waves clapping tool during the demonstration outside the government house in Bangkok, Thailand, January 26, 2011. (Photo: AP) | 
Bangkok January 27, 2011
The Thai government is under  increasing pressure from thousands of street protesters.  Red-dressed  anti-government protesters are holding monthly demonstrations to express  anger at last year’s bloody crackdown.  And now yellow-dressed  protesters have surrounded the seat of government, demanding tough  action against Cambodia over a border dispute. 
Thailand’s Red Shirts are back on the streets of Bangkok, holding monthly demonstrations.
They want justice for the 90  people killed last May, most of them civilians, when the government  ordered the military to end their occupation of a Bangkok commercial  area.
 Red Shirt leader Jatuporn Prompan says they also want their leaders, now facing terrorism charges, to be released.
He says they do not know when  the leaders will be granted bail, so people outside must show their  power through peaceful means to show that those who are behind bars do  have friends. Jatuporn says everybody asks for them to be released and  sees that they have not received justice.
And, as if the Red Shirts were  not enough to contend with, now the government’s former supporters, the  Yellow Shirts, are on the streets, but not in its defense.
At least 2,000 yellow-dressed  protesters surrounded the seat of government this week and say they will  stay until it gets tough with Cambodia over a border dispute. These  mass protests are becoming almost routine. 
In 2008, the Yellow Shirts  besieged this same area for weeks, and shut down Bangkok’s two airports,  helping to push out two governments aligned with the Red Shirts. 
And thousands of Reds blockaded an upscale shopping and tourist area for about two months last year.
The nationalist Yellow Shirts  want the government to revoke a memorandum of understanding with  Cambodia on the border and expel Cambodians from areas Thailand claims.
“We had so many negotiations,  forums, with the government. For one and two years already. Nothing  happened,”  Parnthep Pourpongpan, spokesman for the Yellow Shirts said.  “So, that’s why we protest.” 
The Yellow Shirts want the  government to stop cooperating with the United Nations cultural body  over the ancient Preah Vihear temple near disputed territory.
The government rejected their demands, saying they would only lead to conflict with Cambodia.
The Yellow Shirts are setting up for a long fight, erecting stages for speeches and setting up tents for shelter.
Protester Phudit Dolpipat set up  his tent on a sidewalk near the main stage. He owns a restaurant in  northeast Thailand but says he will not leave Bangkok until the  protesters’ demands are met.
The Preah Vihear Temple belongs  to Cambodia according to the World Court, but the area around Preah  Vihear, he says, is Thai territory. He says they are going to lose this  area so that is why he joined the rally.
Despite their shared anger at the government, there is no chance of the Yellow and Red Shirts teaming up.
Yellow Shirt protests in 2006  ended after a military coup that ousted Prime Minister Thaksin  Shinawatra. Most Yellow Shirts consider him to be corrupt and  authoritarian. Mr. Thaksin lives in exile to avoid a jail sentence for  corruption.
Most of the Red Shirts, however,  support Mr. Thaksin. They also consider the current government is  illegitimate, saying it came to power with military support after two  elected governments led Mr. Thaksin’s allies were removed by court  orders.


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