Showing posts with label Form PPT. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Form PPT. Show all posts

Thursday, November 26, 2009

Thailand: The Cockroaches take over


The appointment of “Democrat” Party leader Abhisit Vejjajiva as the new Thai Prime Minister is the final stage of the second coup against an elected government.

After the deliberate chaos created by the PAD’s seizure of the airports, the courts stepped in to dissolve the hugely popular governing party for the second time.

The Army chief then called a meeting of Democrat Party parliamentarians along with some of the most corrupt elements of the governing coalition parties. It is widely believed that the Army chief and others threatened and bribed MPs to change sides.

Chief among them is “Newin Chitchorp”, who was named by his father after the infamous Burmese dictator.
The Democrat Party is known among the cyber community as the “Cockroach Party”.

This is because cockroaches live in filthy places and can survive even nuclear holocausts.

The party has survived for many years, forming governments after various crises. These so-called Democrats have systematically backed anti-democratic measures.

They supported the 2006 coup, the military constitution and the PAD. One Democrat Party MP was the leader of the mob that took over the international airport.

Over the last 30 years, the Democrat party has never won an overall majority in parliament.

It does not represent the people. During the Thaksin years it spent the whole time criticising the universal health care scheme and other pro-poor policies.

After the 1997 economic crisis it used state money to prop up the banks and guarantee the savings of the rich, while telling the poor to fend for themselves and depend on their families. Even Abhisit’s name in Thai means “privilege”.

He is an Oxford graduate from a wealthy family.
The first coup, on 19th September 2006, was a straight forward military coup, using tanks and soldiers wearing Royal yellow ribbons.

The military junta tore-up the democratic constitution and replaced it with an authoritarian one.

Half the Senate was appointed by the military and many so-called independent bodies were staffed by junta supporters.

The military appointed themselves to lucrative state enterprise positions. Then they got the courts to dissolve the Thai Rak Thai Party despite the fact that it had won repeated elections.

Thaksin’s Thai Rak Thai party was and remains hugely popular among the majority of Thais. This party introduced the first universal healthcare scheme and projects to stimulate village economies.

The aim was to develop Thailand as a whole, increasing the education and health status of the general population, thus turning them into “stake-holders”.

This was a winning formula, an alliance between a pro-poor capitalist party and the poor, both urban and rural.


But Thaksin’s modernisation plans, which also included major infrastructure development such as public transport projects for Bangkok, upset the Old Order.

This “Old Order” is not headed by the King, as many commentators think.

The Old Order is made up of local political mafias, the army, conservative judges and the Democrat Party.

They were joined by businessmen like Sondhi Limthongkul, who initially supported Thaksin, but fell out over personal interests.

The PAD mobilised a fascist-style middle class mob to cause chaos. They seized the Government House, destroyed offices, stole weapons and then tried to close parliament. Their final act was the take-over of the two international airports with the open support of the military.

The PAD and the Old Order want to reduce democracy further.

They want to reduce the number of elected members of parliament, stiffen Lese Majesty laws and destroy the alliance between the poor and Thaksin.

They are angry that the poor have become politicised.

They hate the fact that state budgets were spent on healthcare, rural development and education. nstead they want to cling to their old privileges, espouse strict “Monetarism” (except for elite and military spending) and advocate that the poor should be “Sufficient” in their poverty.

These people use neo-liberal free-market ideas in association with the King’s “Sufficiency Economy” ideology. Their excuse for opposing democracy is their belief that the poor are too stupid to deserve the right to vote.

The Thai King has always been weak. His status has been systematically promoted by military juntas and the elite in general. We are all socialised to think that the King is an “ancient Absolute Monarchy”, while at the same time being within the Constitution.

This picture of power creates a shell to protect the entire ruling class and the status quo under a climate of fear. The army especially needs such a legitimising shell because it is no longer OK for the military to hold political power, unless it can claim to protect the Monarchy.

In previous political crises, such as in 1973 and 1992, the King only intervened late in the day after it was clear who had won.

In the present crisis the King has remained silent and has not made any attempts to resolve the crisis. He missed his annual birthday speech on 4th December this year, claiming a sore throat.

The Royal dimension to this crisis is that it is a struggle between two elite groups. One side have been much more successful in claiming Royal legitimacy.

But ironically this claim by the anti-Thaksin lot is causing a crisis for the Monarchy because it associates PAD violence and law-breaking with the Monarchy and the actions by the military have created an image that the Monarchy is against the majority of the population.

The support shown by the Queen for the PAD has also angered or disappointed many Thais. The new government will be made up of a coalition of some of the most corrupt and unprincipled politicians.

This shows that the elites’ opposition to Thaksin was never really about preventing corruption or vote buying, despite the fact that many ordinary middle-class people might have felt that it was. Even the Democrat Party has a history of vote buying and corruption.

The Democrat governor of Bangkok had to resign recently under a corruption cloud. Yet the party was not dissolved by the courts. So far, Thaksin and his fellow politicians have only been found guilty of technicalities.

No serious corruption charges have been proven. No evidence of real election fraud has ever been unearthed. In fact,

Thaksin’s party was reducing the importance of vote-buying through pro-poor policies. This is what angered the Old Order.

It meant that they could only overthrow his government buy promising more to the poor or by using various means to organise coups.

There are a number of questions which need to be put to the new government: Read More

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Questioning Amnesty International’s double standards


Yesterday PPT posted on the Asian Human Rights Commission statement on the use of the Computer Crimes Act as a substitute for the lese majeste law and Reporters Without Borders released a report the day before criticizing the use of this other laws that limit expression.

PPT assumes that because these “crimes” are political and related to the monarchy in Thailand, that Amnesty International will say nothing. That has been its “policy.”

But what are they doing elsewhere? On 16 November 2009, there was this:

Urgent Action 308/09 – Prisoners of conscience – Bloggers Jailed in Azerbaijan: URGENT ACTION APPEAL – From Amnesty International USA


Two “activists and bloggers” are said by AI to “have been sentenced to two and a half years and two years respectively in an unfair trial.

Amnesty International believes the charges against them were fabricated and they have been imprisoned solely for exercising their right to freedom of expression.” One of the men posted “a satirical video … criticizing the Azerbaijani government … on the video-sharing website YouTube.”

Interestingly, in this case, the men are jailed on charges that don’t relate to their postings. However, AI considers them prisoners of conscience because the government has targeted them for their political views.

So can anyone at Amnesty International explain why Thailand is different for the organization? How is the jailing of people in Thailand different? PPT sees that the details are different.

In fact, the use of the law is harsher in Thailand (jailing for 20 years, reduced to 10 – Suwicha Thakor) and being held for long periods without bail (Suwicha and Nat Sattayapornpisut), but political “crimes” are very similar.

Indeed, in Thailand a special law has been created to facilitate intimidation and to allow for people to be “imprisoned solely for exercising their right to freedom of expression.”

That law was put in place by an illegitimate, military-backed government. The trials of these Thais could never be considered fair.

We wonder how it is that Amnesty International feels comfortable operating with such double standards.

Readers may want to ask AI, but be aware that emailing AI produces, in PPT’s experience, no response at all: Amnesty International USA, 600 Pennsylvania Ave SE 5th fl, Washington DC 20003, Email: uan@aiusa.org, http://www.amnestyusa.org/, Phone: 202.544.0200, Fax: 202.675.8566

Thursday, November 19, 2009

RePADifying "In Thailand"



PPT is interested in the way Foreign Minister Kasit Piromya has been speaking in recent days. We understand that Kasit has been under considerable pressure in dealing with the Thailand-Cambodia conflict.

What is interesting is the comments Kasit made regarding an alleged Thai spy arrested in Cambodia and the link between his alleged actions and the Cambodian expulsion of the Thai First Secretary.

The alleged spy is said to have provided flight information of ex-Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra and Cambodia’s Hun Sen and provided that information to the Thai Embassy.

Kasit is reported to have cut short his participation in an APEC meeting in Singapore, claiming that “Cambodia’s arrest of a Thai engineer on spying charges is nothing more than intimidation with the intention to defame Thailand.”

He is then said to have accused Thaksin “of using a helping hand from a neigbhouring country as a tool to overthrow the monarchy and the government.” Kasit added: “The only problem now is that Thaksinocracy is still alive…”.

This kind of attack – notably using the monarchy – is the language that Sondhi Limthongkul and the People’s Alliance for Democracy used in attacking Thailand in the period from 2005. As PPT has been pointing out, underpinned by the support of the palace and the military, when the “enemy” is Thaksin, PAD and the Democrat Party remain closely aligned.

Update: PPT has not seen any other confirmation of a report we found in the quirky blog Thai Intelligent News, which claims that the spy case in Cambodia was part of a Thai plot to assassinate Thaksin.

Such a plot is not unthinkable given the hatred of Thaksin amongst his powerful opponents and the fact that assassination is a part of Thailand’s political landscape.

Think of the “influential people” who have been bumped off, the extra-judicial killings under Thaksin and several other governments, the attempts to assassinate Thaksin when he was in power, and the failed attempt on Sondhi’s life.

Readers comments and links to other stories like this would be welcomed (email us by going here).

Saturday, November 14, 2009

Triumph struggle and lese majeste reaches Argentina











The plight of Triumph workers and Jitra Kotchadej has received support from unions in Argentina.We thought PPT readers might be interested in this international solidarity. The report is from El Vecinalista (29 September 2009).

Our Spanish is non-existent, so we hope that Google translate does a reasonable enough translation, despite obvious errors.

By the way the designation “Republic of Thailand” below is not a mistranslation for the story says: “Embajador de la República de Tailandia Buenos Aires, 24 de setiembre de 2009 Sr Anucha Osathanond”:

Ambassador of the Republic of Thailand, Buenos Aires, September 24, 2009
Mr Anucha Osathanond:

Through this, the Foundation Alameda and Sewing Workers Union wish to express serious concern at the situation facing workers in the factory sewing Body Fashion Thailand, a wholly owned subsidiary of Triumph International.

It is public knowledge, our Foundation has reported 100 domestic clothing brands and international Argentina federal court for not respecting human and labor rights of sewing.

In this struggle we have had the support of the Ombudsman of the City of Buenos Aires, the National Institute of Industrial Technology, the Assistant Secretary of Labor of the City, the Catholic Church and Judaica Foundation. In some cases we have achieved that justice process and getting to trial to shop owners and even manufacturers.

We are well aware of deseleales practices of many brands of clothing at the time were reported in Southeast Asia and then in Argentina, as was the case of Puma. So no wonder the attitude of the firm that seeks to dismiss The Triumph massively tailors in Thailand and the Philippines.

If we are surprised, however, that the Thai government is not making every effort to enforce the law, international standards established by the International Labor Organization (ILO) so that is conforms to the law firm and separation its arbitrary practices against the stitchers of Body Fashion Thailand.

With the greatest respect, the Foundation Alameda and Sewing Workers Union calls on your government to take urgent action to defend and protect the 2000 tailors who are suffering distress and fear of being fired and to uphold the right of his union act according to law.
Basically our demands are:

1. Do not allow unfair practices of the firm Body Fashion International, which these days is arbitrarily changing work schedules and functions of the sewing to force them to resign and leave the factory.

It is public knowledge that the true intentions of this factory and The Triumph is a 2000 fire sewing.

2. Do not allow the failure of the collective bargaining agreement and union recognition, which is ignored by the company.

3. Must cease the persecution against the top union leader, Mrs Jitra Kotshadej, who was fired and criminalized court for the crime of thinking differently. It just is chasing her for using a T-shirt in a national television debate in which he said “

Those who stand are not criminals. Thinking differently is not a crime. “The caption on the shirt referred to the right of people not to stand when the royal anthem is played and the abuse of lèse-majeste laws to suppress political opposition.

We fully subscribe to what reported in due course by the Clean Clothes Campaign in Europe in relation to the case of Jitra Kotshadej.

4. The Thai government has legal and economic instruments to compel the company to repeat the law, the tailors and their union. Should I stop giving subsidies and loans to a company that does not fit right and apply the corresponding sanctions.

5. As set international labor standards, the company must provide unions Triumph of sewing, both in Thailand and the Philippines, any information that substantiates the reasons for which it intends to dismiss more than 4,000 tailors in both countries.

This request is consistent with that indicated by indices multinational OECD, ILO conventions and the same code of conduct made by Triumph.

6. The Thai government should ensure that the company allowed the union to conduct union meetings and should withdraw the arrest warrants for union leaders simply by thinking differently.

7. The Thai government should not use the ISA (Internal Security Act) against gatherings, peaceful demonstrations or peaceful union activity developed by the tailors’ union.

8. Sewers are not disposable goods in free trade zones, but men and women who should respect their rights to work and free association, which the company unfortunately the government ignored and not enforced.

Alameda Foundation and Sewing Workers Union pledges to redouble efforts with other NGOs and trade unions from several continents to enforce labor rights and union of tailors working for Triumph in both Thailand and the Philippines.

We sincerely hope that the Thai government to intervene in this dramatic conflict and avoid layoffs. We also hope to stop the persecution against union leaders and advocates the right to work, freedom and life.

Gustavo Vera, president of the Alameda Foundation
Nestor Escudero, Polo Textile Workers Union Sewing
Ezekiel Conde representing Soho, Sewing Workers Union