The Borneo Post

Thais gather for cremation of late king

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I want to come and bid goodbye as close as I can to him.

BANGKOK: Crowds of mourners braved overnight downpours as they crushed into Bangkok’s old quarter yesterday to secure a vantage point for the funeral of late King Bhumibol Adulyadej, a spectacula­r event one year in the making.

The cremation late today will be the biggest Thai royal event for a century and will see colourful funeral procession­s pass through the capital before his pyre is lit inside a purpose-built site.

Tens of thousands of black- clad mourners have massed along the procession routes near Bangkok’s Grand Palace despite heavy overnight rain.

They gathered for a final chance to be near a king revered as a neardeity during his 70-year reign.

“I want to come and bid goodbye as close as I can to him,” Una Tontakulch­anchai, 40, told AFP.

Funeral ceremonies began yesterday afternoon as Bhumibol’s heir King Maha Vajiralong­korn joined a Buddhist merit-making ceremony for his father at the Grand Palace.

Palace aides shuffling on their knees were in attendance on the new king, Rama X of the Chakri dynasty, as he lit candles before the rituals began with monks.

Thailand has been in sombre

Una Tontakulch­anchai, mourner

mood since Bhumibol’s death one year ago aged 88, a watershed moment that removed the nation’s only unifying figure during decades of political upheaval and economic change.

ManyThaish­avewornmou­rning attire for a year as tributes to the monarch dominate every aspect of life.

Public grieving is encouraged by the ultra-royalist junta that grabbed power in 2014.

Any deviation is discourage­d by a draconian royal defamation law that punishes criticism of the monarchy with jail time.

On Tuesday, soldiers whisked an activist from his Bangkok home to the western province of Kanchanabu­ri after he threatened on Facebook to disrupt the cremation ceremony.

Ekachai Hongkangwa­n, a rare voice of dissent in the junta-ruled nation, was given the option of leaving the capital or staying in a military barracks while the fiveday funeral unfolds, according to human rights lawyers.

“He was not charged but the military said he was taken for the sake of order and peace during the royal cremation ceremony,” Anon Numpa, an attorney with Thai Lawyers for Human Rights, told AFP.

In a Facebook post last week Ekachai said he would ‘wear a red shirt and do something unthinkabl­e’ on Octob 26, the day of the cremation.

Authoritie­s said they could not confi rm the lawyers’ account.

Today’s cremation ceremony is expected to draw a quarter of a million Thais to central Bangkok, as well as a roster of foreign royals and heads of state. — AFP

 ??  ?? The Royal Crematoriu­m site for the late King Bhumibol Adulyadej is seen near the Grand Palace in Bangkok, Thailand. — Reuters photo
The Royal Crematoriu­m site for the late King Bhumibol Adulyadej is seen near the Grand Palace in Bangkok, Thailand. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? File photo shows the motorcade transporti­ng the body of Bhumibol to his palace in Bangkok. — AFP photo
File photo shows the motorcade transporti­ng the body of Bhumibol to his palace in Bangkok. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? File photo shows a woman holding aloft a picture of the late King Bhumibol as people gather to commemorat­e his birthday on top of Bhumibol Bridge in Bangkok. — AFP photo
File photo shows a woman holding aloft a picture of the late King Bhumibol as people gather to commemorat­e his birthday on top of Bhumibol Bridge in Bangkok. — AFP photo

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