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Thread: Thailand is in the middle of a fucking coup right now

  1. Thailand is in the middle of a fucking coup right now

    Quote Originally Posted by AP/NY Times
    Thai Prime Minister Declares State of Emergency
    By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) -- The Thai military launched a coup against Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra on Tuesday night, circling his offices with tanks, seizing control of TV stations and declaring a provisional authority pledging loyalty to the king.

    An announcement on Thai television declared that a "Council of Administrative Reform" with King Bhumibol Adulyadej as head of state had seized power in Bangkok and nearby provinces without any resistance.

    At least 14 tanks surrounded Government House, Thaksin's office. Thaksin was in New York at the U.N. General Assembly and declared a state of emergency via a government-owned TV station.

    A convoy of four tanks rigged with loudspeakers and sirens rolled through a busy commercial district warning people to get off the street for their own safety.

    A senior military official, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the situation, said army Commander-in-Chief Gen. Sondhi Boonyaratkalin had used the military to take over power from the prime minister.

    Thaksin has faced calls to step down amid allegations of corruption and abuse of power.

    Massive rallies earlier this year forced Thaksin to dissolve Parliament and call an election in April, three years ahead of schedule. The poll was boycotted by opposition parties and later annulled by Thailand's top courts, leaving the country without a working legislature.

    Thaksin's Thai Rak Thai Party twice won landslide election victories, in 2001 and 2005 and had been expected to win the next vote on Oct. 15, bolstered by its widespread support in the country's rural areas.

    In 1992, demonstrators against a military strongman were gunned down before the king stepped in to end the fighting and usher in a period of stability.

    On Monday, Thaksin had said he may step down as leader of the country after upcoming elections, but he will remain at the helm of his party, despite calls for him to give up the post.

    On Tuesday night, several hundred soldiers were deployed at government installations and major intersections in the capital of Bangkok, according to an Associated Press reporter.

    Army-owned TV channel 5 interrupted regular broadcasts with patriotic music and showed pictures of the king. At least some radio and television stations monitored in Bangkok suspended programming.

    The cable television station of the Nation newspaper reported that tanks were parked at the Rachadamnoen Road and royal plaza close to the royal palace and government offices.

    "The prime minister with the approval of the cabinet declares serious emergency law in Bangkok from now on" Thaksin said on Channel 9 from New York. He said he was ordering the transfer of the nation's army chief to work in the prime minister's office, effectively suspending him from his military duties.

    Thaksin's critics want to jettison his policies promoting privatization, free trade agreements and CEO-style administration.

    Opposition to Thaksin gained momentum in January when his family announced it had sold its controlling stake in telecommunications company Shin Corp. to Singapore's state-owned Temasek Holdings for a tax-free $1.9 billion. Critics allege the sale involved insider trading and complain a key national asset is now in foreign hands.

    Thaksin also has been accused of stifling the media and mishandling a Muslim insurgency in southern Thailand that flared under his rule.

    In Thailand's mostly Muslim south, separatist insurgents have waged a bloody campaign that has left at least 1,700 dead, mostly civilians, since 2004. Citizens there have complained of rights abuses by soldiers and discrimination by the country's Buddhist majority.
    http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/worl...gewanted=print

    sneaky fucks, waiting until the PM goes to new york for the UN general assembly

  2. I really don't know what to make of this.

    Military coups usually don't turn out that well for the average citizen, I think.

    They should get Tony Jaa in there to clean things up.

  3. I don't know shit about the situation in Thailand, but yeah, coups usually turn out really, really poorly in the end.


  4. Dolemite, the Bad-Ass King of all Pimps and Hustlers
    Gymkata: I mean look at da lil playah woblin his way into our hearts in the sig awwwwwww

  5. Aww shit, and one of my friends just headed there. Fuck can't a war break out in this world where I'm not personally affected. Now I'm gonna get all upset, get my social justice mojo going and have to organize some sorta campus/city based relief for Thailand.

    Really this time, I don't care. Even if my friend Jenny just left this morning for Thailand.

    Iraq, Lebanon, Afganistan... now Thailand...

  6. I hope the new gov takes a hard stance on the Muslim insurgency in the South.


  7. Quote Originally Posted by Nomi View Post
    I don't know shit about the situation in Thailand, but yeah, coups usually turn out really, really poorly in the end.
    That's really conditional on who is being deposed by who. In Peru, it's almost routine for the military to depose the civilian government when it becomes too corrupt or ineffective, and then once a new democratic regime is established they immediately turn back over power. The American Revolution was essentially a coup d'état against the British colonial government. So, coups aren't always bad.

    Then again there are coups where both parties are assholes like in El Salvador and Nicaragua. No one really wins no matter who ends up in charge, but the people almost assuredly lose (especially when the U.S. got involved and funded the death squads). But those are all bloody coups, not the bloodless ones like what occured in the former Soviet Union and some other spots. That's where the tanks roll in and sit there waiting for the government to dissolve, which I what I think is happening here.

    It could get bloody quick, though. Very quick.
    Time for a change

  8. Come on, American Military, what are you waiting for?

  9. Pls vote this guy in:


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