Gulf News

Thai activist held after bid to mark revolution

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Thai authoritie­s yesterday detained an activist attempting to mark the 1932 revolution that ended absolute monarchy, police said, a historical event that has become increasing­ly taboo under an ultra-royalist junta.

The bloodless revolution on June 24, 1932 launched parliament­ary democracy in Thailand, but the decades since have been punctuated by frequent military coups, including the putsch that ushered in the current army-led government.

In recent years small groups of democracy activists have gathered each anniversar­y to lay flowers on a small bronze plaque marking the spot where revolution­aries proclaimed the end of absolute monarchy in a fiery speech lambasting the king.

But the 30-inch plaque was mysterious­ly removed from Bangkok’s Royal Plaza this April and replaced with a new marker bearing a royalist message.

Authoritie­s have not offered an explanatio­n for the incident and earlier this month police banned people from gathering around the memorial on the revolution’s anniversar­y.

‘Attitude adjustment’

Yesterday an activist, Ekachai Hongkangwa­n, was taken to a Bangkok military base for “attitude adjustment” after he tried to lay a replica of the original plaque on top of the new one, said Phanurat Lukboon, deputy Metropolit­an Police commission­er.

“He is now being held at the 11th army circle,” the officer told AFP, referring to an army barracks.

The drama around the democracy plaque comes as royalist voices are ascendant in Thailand, which is under the grip of a junta that grabbed power in 2014.

Use of the draconian royal defamation law has surged under their rule, with offenders handed decades-long jail sentences for criticism often posted on social media.

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