Kuwait Times

Thai protesters defy ban for fourth day

-

BANGKOK: Thousands of pro-democracy protestors took over a major Bangkok intersecti­on yesterday with posters bearing the faces of arrested activists, defying a ban on gatherings and stern warnings from authoritie­s who have escalated a crackdown in recent days. The youth-led movement suffered several blows last week, with scores arrested after demonstrat­ors surrounded a royal motorcade and flashed a pro-democracy salute to Queen Suthida during a Wednesday protest.

The government reacted by imposing “serious” emergency measures banning gatherings of more than four and allowing for the arrest of protest leaders, many of whom are calling for the removal of Prime Minister Prayut Chan-O-Cha, a former military chief first brought to power in a 2014 coup. Police also deployed water cannon against unarmed demonstrat­ors on Friday in Bangkok’s central shopping district in an escalation of tactics that drew outrage across Thai society.

But the crackdown has emboldened the movement’s mostly young supporters who have turned up in large numbers to daily guerrilla protests around Bangkok. The locations are announced an hour before to outwit authoritie­s, who shut down much of the city’s Skytrain and undergroun­d rail services to discourage people from joining in.

“I cannot let the students fight alone,” said 24-year-old Phat, a first-time rallygoer who arrived at yesterday’s protest venue at Bangkok’s Victory Monument. “I want true democracy,” he told AFP. Thousands descended on the major traffic thoroughfa­re from 4:00 pm (0900 GMT) shouting “Free our friends” while carrying posters of arrested activists.

They include human rights lawyer Anon Numpa, Parit “Penguin” Chiwarak, and Panusaya “Rung” Sithijiraw­attanakul - three of the most recognizab­le faces in the leaderless movement who have consistent­ly called for reforms to the monarchy. Among their demands is the abolition of a draconian royal defamation law - which shields King Maha Vajiralong­korn from criticism - and a call for the monarch to stay out of the country’s turbulent politics.

Once-taboo in Thailand, the issue of royal reform demanded by protesters is one of the biggest challenges facing the kingdom’s conservati­ve military-aligned government. The social media-savvy protesters have also harnessed unorthodox ways of spreading their messages, sending alerts through newly formed groups on Telegram - a secure messaging app - and taken tips from Hong Kong’s pro-democracy protests.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait