Tuesday, December 09, 2008
  The king and them [-This article is banned in Thailand]

  Thailand's monarchy

  Dec 4th 2008
  From The Economist print edition

  The untold story of the palace’s role behind the collapse of Thai democracy

  THAILAND’S tourism business, its export industries and its reputation have 
been wrecked by recent events. Crowds of royalists have occupied the 
government’s offices for months and then seized Bangkok’s airports. The police 
refused to evict them. The army refused to help. This week the siege was ended 
after the courts disbanded three parties in the ruling coalition. But the 
parties plan to re-form under new names and continue governing, so fresh strife 
threatens. It is as if a thin veneer of modernity, applied during the boom of 
the 1980s and early 1990s, has peeled away. Until recently a beacon of Asian 
pluralism, Thailand is sliding into anarchy.

  The conflict began three years ago as peaceful rallies against corruption and 
abuse of power in the government of Thaksin Shinawatra. The protesters, wearing 
royal-yellow shirts and accusing Mr Thaksin of being a closet republican, got 
their way when royalist generals removed him in the coup of 2006. But on 
democracy’s restoration last year, Thais elected a coalition led by Mr 
Thaksin’s allies. The yellow-shirts of the inaptly named People’s Alliance for 
Democracy (PAD) revived their protests and adopted increasingly thuggish 
tactics, prompting Mr Thaksin’s supporters to don red shirts and fight back.

  Speak it not

  Throughout this conflict, the great unmentionable, not just for the Thai 
press but also for most foreign reporters, has been the role of King Bhumibol, 
his family and their closest courtiers. The world’s most ferociously enforced 
law against lèse-majesté (offending the crown) prevents even the mildest 
discussion of the palace’s role in Thai public life. Such laws are mostly in 
disuse elsewhere, but Thailand’s was harshened in the 1970s. Absurdly, anyone 
can bring a lèse-majesté suit. The police have to take seriously the most 
trivial complaints. All this makes the law a useful tool for politicians and 
others seeking a way to damage their foes. Often, the press is not allowed to 
explain the nature of any supposed offence against the crown, so Thais have no 
way to tell whether it really was so disrespectful.

  The lèse-majesté law is an outrage in itself. It should not be enforced in 
any country with democratic pretensions. Worse is that the law hides from Thais 
some of the reasons for their chronic political woes. For what the king himself 
calls the “mess” Thailand is in stems in many ways from his own meddling in 
politics during his 62-year reign (see article). In part, the strife also 
reflects jockeying for power ahead of the succession. With the king celebrating 
his 81st birthday on December 5th, that event looms ever larger.

  Much of the story of how the king’s actions have hurt his country’s politics 
is unfamiliar because Thais have not been allowed to hear it. Some may find our 
criticisms upsetting, but we do not make them gratuitously. Thailand needs open 
debate if it is to prepare for the time when a less revered monarch ascends the 
throne. It cannot be good for a country to subscribe to a fairy-tale version of 
its own history in which the king never does wrong, stays above politics and 
only ever intervenes on the side of democracy. None of that is true.

  The official version of Thai history dwells on episodes such as the events of 
1992, when Bhumibol forced the resignation of a bloodstained dictator and set 
his country on course for democracy. But many less creditable royal 
interventions have gone underreported and are seldom discussed. In 1976, 
paranoid about the communist threat, the king appeared to condone the growth of 
the right-wing vigilante movement whose members later took part in the 
slaughter of unarmed student protesters. In the cold war America saw Bhumibol 
as a staunch ally and helped finance his image-making machine. This 
long-standing alliance and the fierce lèse-majesté law have led Western 
diplomats, academics and journalists to bite their tongues and refrain from 
criticism.

  After the 2006 coup, the 15th in Bhumibol’s reign, officials tried to tell 
foreigners that protocol obliged the king to accept the generals’ seizure of 
power. Thais got the opposite message. The king quickly granted the coupmakers 
an audience, and newspapers splashed pictures of it, sending Thais the message 
that he approved of them. In truth the king has always been capable of showing 
his displeasure at coups when it suited him, by rallying troops or by dragging 
his feet in accepting their outcome. And he exerts power in other ways. Since 
2006, when he told judges to take action on the political crisis, the courts 
seem to have interpreted his wishes by pushing through cases against Mr Thaksin 
and his allies—most recently with this week’s banning of the parties in the 
government.

  No fairy-tale future

  In the imagination of Thai royalists their country is like Bhutan, whose 
charismatic new king is adored by a tiny population that prefers royal rule to 
democracy. In reality, with public anger at the queen’s support for the 
thuggish PAD and the unsuitability of Bhumibol’s heir simmering, Thailand risks 
the recent fate of Nepal, which has suffered a bitter civil war and whose 
meddling king is now a commoner in a republic. The PAD was nurtured by the 
palace and now threatens to engulf it. An enduring image of the past few days 
is that of PAD toughs shooting at government supporters while holding up the 
king’s portrait. The monarchy is now, more clearly than ever, part of the 
problem. It sits at the apex of a horrendously hierarchical and unequal 
society. You do not have to be a republican to agree that this needs to be 
discussed.

  As The Economist went to press, on the eve of the king's birthday, he was 
reported to be unwell, and unable to deliver his usual annual speech to the 
nation. So he had still not repudiated the yellow-shirts' claims to be acting 
in his name. His long silence has done great damage to the rule of law in 
Thailand. He could still help, by demanding, as no one else can, the abolition 
of the archaic lèse-majesté law and the language in the current charter that 
supports it, and so enable Thais to have a proper debate about their future. He 
made a half-hearted stab at this in 2005, saying he should not be above 
criticism. But nothing short of the law’s complete repeal will do. Thailand’s 
friends should tell it so.

  Tuesday, December 09, 2008
  "The Economist" banned over critical article on Thai king [-So much for 
democracy in Thailand!]

  9 December 2008
  SEAPA (Southeast Asian Press Alliance)

  The Thai distributor of "The Economist" banned the 6-10 December issue of the 
magazine because it contained an article critical of the country's monarch, 
news reports said.

  The Agence France Presse (AFP) Bangkok bureau quoted bookseller and 
distributor Asia Books as saying it decided not to import this week's issue 
because the story on King Bhumibol Adulyadej's alleged role in politics "risks 
insulting the monarchy".

  Under Thailand's lese majeste law, anyone who insults the king or the royal 
family faces a jail term of up to 15 years.

  "We received excerpts of the magazine beforehand and we considered that it's 
sensitive and not appropriate, and also risks insulting the monarchy. So we 
decided not to import that edition," an Asia Books staff member told AFP.

  The article, which is also available online, questioned the alleged 
involvement of the monarchy in the country's political affairs and its support 
for military interventions, the latest of which was the 2006 coup that ousted 
Thaksin Shinawatra.

  Thai police said the importer had agreed to a self-imposed ban on the story 
because of its critical stance on the monarchy.

  "Police have talked to importers and distributors who agreed not to import 
the issue of December 6-10 because an article in the magazine criticised the 
monarchy," said Lieutenant General Thiradet Rodphothong, commander of Special 
Branch Police. "Therefore the police do not have to officially ban the 
magazine," he said.

  "The Economist" website, which features the article, continues to be 
accessible and has not been blocked, according to Reuters.

  The incident came on the heels of the latest political turmoil in Thailand 
which led to the shutdown by anti-government protesters of Bangkok's 
international airport for a week, paralyzing the country's economy, stranding 
tens of thousands of passengers, and hurting Thailand's biggest dollar 
earner—tourism.
  AddThis

  2:45 AM


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