The Phnom Penh Post

Activists to march on anniversar­y of Thai coup

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THAI pro-democracy activists on Saturday vowed to march on the seat of government to mark the fourth anniversar­y of a military coup, comparing the junta leader to Pinocchio for not holding promised elections.

The military that seized power on May 22, 2014, in the name of curbing political instabilit­y banned gatherings of more than five people and repeatedly dangled the prospect of a return to democracy.

Polls are now tentativel­y set for February 2019, but impatience with the status quo has prompted a spate of rare rallies since the start of the year.

The hundreds of people who attended Saturday’s demonstrat­ion at Bangkok’s Thammasat University said they would take it up a notch and march on Government House on the coup anniversar­y later this month if the election date was not moved up to November and the junta dissolved.

“We want the military junta to step down from authority and make elections happen in this country, because it’s four years now that no election and no democracy has occurred,” said student Karn Pongprapha­pan, a spokesman for the “We Want Voting Movement” who has helped organise some of the rallies at Thammasat.

Asked why the rallies had not attracted a larger base among Thai society, Karn said people were scared to engage in politics.

Authoritie­s have filed charges against multiple activists but so far they have eschewed a sweeping crackdown.

“We regard their rallies as expressing opinion but it must not affect society,” government spokesman Sunsern Kaewkumner­d said in a LINE message to reporters before the event, which included music and posters mocking the military elite and Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha, the junta chief.

The afternoon rally featured memes depicting Prayut with a long nose just like the famously fibbing character Pinocchio, while one man walked around with a model of a tank positioned atop a copy of the Constituti­on.

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