A forensic police officer drops a marker next to blood at the site of
what police say were clashes between anti-government protesters and
supporters of Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra in Bangkok January 26,
2014. Thailand: Large-Scale Violence Feared in Run-Up to Polls
After a bloody Sunday in which a protest leader
in Bangkok was killed and mobs surrounded polling stations, prospects
look increasingly grim for Thailand
TIME Magazine | 27 Jan. 2014
Blood was split in the streets of Bangkok once again on Sunday. With
disputed general elections set to commence in a week’s time,
antigovernment demonstrators loyal to the People’s Democratic Reform
Committee (PDRC) clashed with supporters of Prime Minster’s Yingluck
Shinawatra’s embattled administration leaving at least one PDRC protest
leader dead and another 11 demonstrators injured.
“The violence represents a continuing ratcheting up of the
tit-for-tat that could become symptomatic of a more pronounced move
towards the potential for civil war in this country,” Paul Chambers,
research director of political science at Chiang Mai University, told
TIME.
Pictures of would-be voters being verbally abused, and in one case
strangled, by protesters went viral on social networking sites,
calcifying an ever-widening political divide that has continually
deepened in the eight years since a military coup unseated the popularly
elected Thaskin Shinawatra.
Following Sunday’s unrest, analysts warned that unless serious talks
commence between Thailand’s warring parties, large-scale violence could
erupt as Thais head to the polls for elections that are still scheduled
for next Sunday.
“The new Bangkok reality is that a week away from the election,
confrontation is growing, dialogue between the two sides is
non-existent, and the situation is dancing on the edge of an abyss of
serious violence,” Brad Adams, director of Human Rights Watch’s Asia
Division, told TIME via email on Monday.
Despite the imposition of emergency rule last week, police appeared
hesitant to restrain the rowdy demonstrators who took to the capital’s
streets to intimidate potential voters from casting their ballots. Law
enforcement officials, who are largely believed to support Yingluck,
continue to grapple with their tenuous relations with the military, who
are regarded as hardline royalists and furtive backers of the
antigovernment protests.
PDRC demonstrators have been accused of trying to goad the country’s
historically coup-prone armed forces to intervene in the current
quagmire, which would amount to a massive blow to Thailand’s tenuous
democratic development.
Late on Friday, the country’s Constitutional Court ruled
that the Election Commission had the power to postpone elections if it
secured Yingluck’s agreement. However, questions remain over whether the
government and the commission would be able to negotiate a new
timetable for general elections.
The opposition Democratic Party has already boycotted the ballot box
and called for the implementation of vague political reforms before
citizens are allowed to return to the polls. In the event that elections
go ahead, Yingluck’s Pheu Thai Party is certain of victory, and would
thus prove that it has the mandate of the people. A postponement of the
polls in order to prevent worsening violence would most likely play in
favor of the opposition’s “war of attrition” against Yingluck, according
to Chambers.
On Monday, in an interview published in the Bangkok Post,
PDRC leader Suthep Thaugsuban stepped up his offensive against the
government by unleashing xenophobic vitriol. He suggested that former
Prime Minister Thaksin Shinwatra, headed to Cambodia this week, was
planning to “give direct commands” to “foreign armed men.” Suthep added:
“I am glad the military are alert. Those who are patriots will not let
any party use armed foreign forces to kill Thai people.”
Thais have historically distrusted neighboring Cambodia, which is
viewed as a traditional enemy of the Kingdom and been accused of
encroaching on Thai territory by claiming the Preah Vihear Temple that
resides along the two countries’ shared border. The opposition Democrat
Party has long espoused accusations that Thaskin and his proxy parties
were selling the country out to Cambodia and were able to buttress their
arguments when the former PM briefly served as economic adviser to
Khmer strongman Hun Sen in 2009.
|
No comments:
Post a Comment