The Cairns Post

Thailand in chaos as anger boils over

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BANGKOK: Thousands of mainly young and black-clad Thai protesters converged at Bangkok’s Democracy Monument as the city’s largest and rowdiest anti-government protest in years stretched deep into Saturday night.

Thailand, a kingdom whose rambunctio­us politics is defined by coups and often deadly street protests, is facing an unpreceden­ted economic shock due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

With the economy in freefall, anger is boiling against a government stacked with elderly former generals and supporters of the royalist establishm­ent.

The crowd of students sang vitriolic anti-government rap songs and waved placards denouncing the administra­tion of former army chief Prayut Chan-O-Cha — and calling for the abolition of the Thailand’s strict royal defamation law.

“The government doesn’t care about us, so either we come out or we lose anyway,” said an 18-year-old student called Sang, giving one name only.

“The laws protect the rich and leave the people with nothing.” Placards saying “end 112” were held up in a rare mass public opposition to a Thailand’s royal defamation law — the number a reference to the section of the criminal code it falls under — which protects the monarchy and its unassailab­le, super-rich King Maha Vajiralong­korn from criticism.

“We have to come out, we have nothing else left,” added Sang’s friend Mee. also wearing the black uniform of the protesters, borrowed from the pro-democracy protests that rocked Hong Kong last year.

As night fell, young protesters shined lights from camera phones as speakers railed against the crush on free expression led by a conservati­ve government they say is holding Thailand back.

Earlier hundreds of police tried to block off access to the Democracy Monument. Scuffles broke out as protesters tipped over metal barriers and forced their way through police lines to hold a noisy rally at the memorial, which was built to mark the 1932 revolution that establishe­d a constituti­onal monarchy.

Analysts say the kingdom risks slipping back towards absolutism under the reign of Rama X and the hardline royalist generals around him.

The pandemic has reinflated the pro-democracy movement.

Hundreds of thousands of students are expected to be jobless when they graduate in September, joining millions of middle class and poor in unemployme­nt in a country with a threadbare welfare system.

Thailand’s previous tit-fortat rounds of political street politics were led by pro- and anti-establishm­ent veterans of the bear-pit of Thai politics, with large financial backing and political machines.

But leaders of the nascent student and youth movement say their activism is organised organicall­y across social media, where anger fuels top trending daily Twitter hashtags against the government.

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