Oman Daily Observer

Thais urged to tone down fun in run-up to king’s cremation

-

BANGKOK: Bangkok’s streets have turned monochrome again as the military government urges the public to wear black-and-white and mute celebratio­ns in the weeks leading up to the cremation of the late king Bhumibol Adulyadej.

The kingdom has been prepping for the elaborate royal funeral since the October 2016 death of Bhumibol, a charismati­c monarch who commanded a cult-like following during his 70-year reign.

His passing plunged the nation into a year of official mourning that has been heavily orchestrat­ed by the ultra-royalist junta, which grabbed power in 2014.

In his weekly address on Friday night, junta chief Prayut Chan-O-Cha urged the public to adhere to mourning guidelines as the October 26 cremation approaches.

He also asked TV stations and entertainm­ent venues not to schedule any overly-joyous material.

“We ask you to consider limiting or refraining from entertainm­ent activities during the month of October, for appropriat­eness with the mood and sentiments of the Thai people during this time,” the junta chief said.

Last month, broadcasti­ng authoritie­s issued detailed guidelines for all television channels, including instructio­ns to “include special programmes to recall King Bhumibol’s royal grace”.

Networks must also reduce their colour saturation by 40 per cent, according to the guidelines from Thailand’s National Broadcasti­ng and Telecommun­ication Commission. Similar curbs were put in place in the month directly after Bhumibol’s death, when all TV stations were initially replaced with black-andwhite state media programmes praising the monarch.

For months after his death almost all of Bangkok turned their wardrobes blackand-white, a trend that has lurched back since the start of the month as tributes to the king crop up around the capital.

The four-day cremation event outside Bangkok’s Grand Palace from October 25-29 will be a lavish affair infused with Buddhist ceremonies, cultural performanc­es and arcane palace rituals.

Officials expect at least a quarter of a million Thais to attend the ceremony.

Bhumibol’s successor, King Maha Vajiralong­korn, is expected to hold his coronation after the cremation but no date has been set.

 ?? — Reuters ?? Officers of the Thai army and royal officials take part in a funeral rehearsal for late king Bhumibol Adulyadej near the Grand Palace in Bangkok on Saturday.
— Reuters Officers of the Thai army and royal officials take part in a funeral rehearsal for late king Bhumibol Adulyadej near the Grand Palace in Bangkok on Saturday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman