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Old 20-05-2014, 01:40 PM
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Thumbs up Sawadikap! Martial Law Please! Tanks and Machine Guns Rules Thailand

An honorable member of the Coffee Shop Has Just Posted the Following:

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/05/21/wo...land.html?_r=0


Imposing Martial Law, Thai Military Denies Plans for Coup

By THOMAS FULLERMAY 20, 2014



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Pedestrians strolled past armed Thai soldiers guarding a government building in Bangkok after martial law was declared. Credit Wason Wanichakorn/Associated Press
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BANGKOK — Citing a century-old law, the head of Thailand’s Army declared what he described as nationwide martial law early Tuesday and urged protesters who have paralyzed the government and blocked elections to “stop their movement.” The order also appeared to apply to pro-government demonstrators who are leading a separate protest.

In a country where the army has staged about a dozen coups, it was not immediately clear what degree of control the military planned to take this time. One politician called it the declaration of martial law “softer than a coup.”

Yet martial law gives the military potentially sweeping powers to maintain public order — “superior power over the civil authority,” according to the wording of the law invoked by Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha, the army chief.

“The army intends to bring peace to the beloved country of all Thais as soon as possible,” General Prayuth said in a nationally televised speech broadcast at 6:30 a.m. “We would like to urge people from every group to stop their movement in order to quickly find a sustainable solution for the country.”

The military sought to convince the public that the army was not launching a coup. A message on a military-controlled television station Tuesday morning read: “We urge people not to panic. Please carry on your daily activities as usual. The imposition of martial law is not a coup d'état.”

In a power struggle that has pitted the Bangkok establishment against an ascendant political movement based in the provinces, politicians and analysts were waiting for signs whether the military would favor one side or the other.

“Right now it remains to be seen which path the military is taking, the choice is very clear,” said Verapat Pariyawong, a Harvard-trained lawyer and commentator, “either try to create a secured environment for election and reform, or to create a pseudo-legitimate process to remove the caretaking government and create transitional guarantees for the traditional elites.”

The United States embassy in Bangkok released a statement Tuesday urging the respect for “democratic principles.”

“We expect the Army to honor its commitment to make this a temporary action to prevent violence, and to not undermine democratic institutions,” the statement said.

For most Thais, very little changed Tuesday. The presence of soldiers on the streets of Bangkok was relatively sparse, and life in the city continued normally, including morning traffic jams, television talk shows and the opening of the stock exchange.

Television programming was periodically interrupted by formal military announcements that all television stations were ordered to broadcast. Perhaps the most significant was a plea by the military that the partisan satellite television stations run by anti- and pro-government groups cease broadcasting. Most politically affiliated stations went offline soon after the military sent out what it termed a request “for cooperation.”

The military also prohibited “all media outlets from the reporting or distribution of any news or still photographs detrimental to national security.” And protest groups for and against the government were barred from leaving circumscribed areas, an order that seemed to contradict the initial order for them to “stop” their movement but also was praised as a sign that the military would not clamp down on civil liberties.

General Prayuth said martial law had been imposed “in order to keep peace and order efficiently and to bring back peace to the people.”
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Thailand’s Constitution allows for martial law. But in his declaration on Tuesday, General Prayuth cited a 1914 law passed while Thailand was still an absolute monarchy. The law requires that a royal proclamation be issued before martial law is announced. General Prayuth did not say whether he had sought the assent of King Bhumibol Adulyadej, who is ailing.

In his speech the general cited “ill-willed people who created violence by using weapons of war” for his decision. More than 25 people have been killed in political violence since the protests began six months ago.

A separate statement issued later in the morning appeared to strip the government of some of its security powers. The statement said the government’s security unit, the Center for the Administration of Peace and Order, had been dissolved and replaced by a military-staffed organization.

A movement to oust the government has the backing of the Bangkok establishment and is seeking to put in place an appointed prime minister. Led by a former opposition politician, Suthep Thaugsuban, the movement has obstructed elections and is seeking the removal of the country’s caretaker government. Until now, the military has said it will not take sides between the protest movement and the caretaker government. But legal experts say the military has already chosen sides because it has a duty to take orders from the elected government.

The antigovernment movement has shut down government buildings and continues to occupy the prime minister’s office. The courts have issued numerous favorable rulings to the movement, including the removal of Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra earlier this month and an order barring the dispersal of the protests.

Earlier in the year, the government imposed a state of emergency using a separate law. It failed to quell violence and the emergency decree was withdrawn. Akanat Promphan, a spokesman for the antigovernment protest movement, posted a message on his Facebook page on Tuesday that protesters would “temporarily suspend our movement today” because of the imposition of martial law. But it was unclear if they would disperse.

Protest leaders continued to address crowds from their stage across from the United Nations building in Bangkok. The movement is seeking the eradication from politics of the country’s most powerful political family, which is led by Ms. Yingluck’s brother, Thaksin Shinawatra, a former business tycoon.

Mr. Thaksin was removed by the military in a 2006 coup, but his party, which draws its strength from the provinces, has defied the traditional elites in Bangkok. The party has won every election in the country since 2001.


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