Friday, 28 November 2008

‘We’ll Fight to Death’


You're just a lawless rioter. If you do believe in democracy, you should fight at the poll and not on the street.

1 comment:

Guanyu said...

‘We’ll Fight to Death’

AP
28 November 2008

BANGKOK - Thai anti-government demonstrators occupying Bangkok’s airports will ‘fight to the death’ if police try to disperse them, a protest leader said on Friday.

‘We are not afraid. We will fight to the death, we will not surrender and we are ready,’ core protest leader Somsak Kosaisuk told a crowd of supporters at the domestic Don Mueang airport.

Earlier on Friday, Thai police said they will negotiate with protesters at the two airports before launching any crackdown.

‘We will use the gentle way first. The priority is to negotiate and not crack down immediately - we are all Thais,’ deputy police commander Major General Piya Sorntrakoon told AFP.

‘We are contacting with their leaders now,’ added Mr. Piya, who commands police in nine provinces in central Thailand.

On Thursday, Prime Minister Somchai Wongsawat declared a state of emergency at the airports, authorising police to take back the terminals. The order appeared to indicate that a crackdown was imminent against the members of the People’s Alliance for Democracy.

But eight hours later, Government spokesman Nattawut Sai-Kau said that police have been instructed to get the protesters out of airports ‘as soon as possible’ in a ‘peaceful manner’. ‘Firstly, the police should open negotiation with the protester. If they refuse to go, police should do whatever is necessary to open the airports on the basis of nonviolence,’ he said.

The new soft line, and the government’s failure to send in security forces so far, has raised doubts about whether Mr. Somchai has the support of security forces and the army, a powerful institution that has traditionally played a key role in the country’s politics.

With tensions running high between the government and the military, the army has already said it is opposed to the use of force to drive protesters from the airport.

Army commander General Anupong Paochinda has so far been neutral in the political turmoil, and even suggested that Mr. Somchai call new elections, triggering speculation that a military coup could take place.The whispers were further fuelled by press reports on Thursday of tank movements that the military later said were only a training exercise.

In an address to the nation on Thursday night to announce the emergency, Mr. Somchai said that navy and air force personnel would help the police, but was vague about any participation by the army, saying only the government would also ask the army ‘to help take care of the people’.

The state of emergency also empowers the government to suspend some civil liberties, including restricting the movement of people and prohibiting mass assembly.

Emergency was declared once before in the three months since the protesters seized the prime minister’s office, but there was no move to take advantage of its provisions, apparently because the army was reluctant to take on the alliance, which at the time enjoyed greater popularity.

The protesters remained defiant on Friday.

‘We are ready to defend ourselves against any government’s operations to get us out of those places,’ said Mr. Parnthep Wongpuapan, a spokesman of the People’s Alliance for Democracy.

‘We are going to stay at the airports until Mr. Somchai resigns,’ he said.

Protesters at the international airport donned goggles and helmets, and first aid stations handed out surgical masks in anticipation of a police raid. The group’s ‘guards’ were patrolling the area with slingshots and metal batons. Many also carry concealed handguns.

Speakers from a makeshift stage repeatedly yelled: ‘Are you scared?’ The crowd roared back: ‘We’re not scared!’ They alliance’s protest grew out of its hatred of former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, a brother-in-law of Somchai.

Thaksin was ousted in a bloodless military coup in September 2006 after months of protests by the alliance.

It accused Thaksin and his allies of corruption and abuse of power. Thaksin is in exile, a fugitive from a conviction for violating a conflict of interest law. The group says Mr. Somchai is merely a Thaksin puppet and should go.

However, Mr. Somchai has stood his ground, saying his departure would be a blow to democracy.

In his televised address on Thursday from the northern city of Chiang Mai, Mr. Somchai accused the alliance of ‘holding the country hostage and the public hostage’.

Mr. Somchai has been in the pro-government stronghold since he returned from a summit in Peru on Wednesday.

The protests, which gathered pace three months ago when demonstrators overran the prime minister’s offices, have paralysed the government, battered the stock market, spooked foreign investors and dealt a serious blow to the tourism industry.

‘If the government uses an emergency decree and decides to crack down on protesters, the army may decide to intervene to prevent that,’ said Prof Panithan Wattanayagorn, a political science professor at Bangkok’s Chulalongkorn University.

Until now, Mr. Somchai has not tried to forcibly oust protesters from his office compound and urged police to exercise restraint during the group’s forays outside the walls. Still, at least six people have been killed thus far in political violence.