Muscat Daily

Anti-government fun run draws thousands of defiant Thais

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Bangkok, Thailand - Around 10,000 Thais joined a ‘run against dictatorsh­ip’ on Sunday, shouting slogans and wielding three-finger salutes from the Hunger Games films in the largest show of political defiance since the 2014 coup.

The runners massed before dawn in a Bangkok park to take a stand against the government, which is led by former junta leader Prayut Chan-O-Cha and backed by a parliament stacked with MPs loyal to the military.

The run was led by Thanathorn Juangroong­ruangkit, the charismati­c billionair­e leader of a stridently anti-military political party which is facing the threat of dissolutio­n.

Thanathorn has been stripped of his MP status, and is facing a battery of legal charges.

“You can feel the anger of the people and their disappoint­ment over the government,” Thanathorn said before the run.

“I think this is the first step to general change in Thailand.”

Before the start, the runners shouted pro-democracy slogans and chanted ‘Get out, Prayut’.

They also wielded the threefinge­r salute made famous by the blockbuste­r Hunger Games films as a symbol of freedom from authoritar­ian rule. “I want a government that takes care of the people and spends money on our well-being and the environmen­t instead of buying tanks and submarines,” said runner Gig, dressed as a tank for the run.

Across Thailand - from Pattani province in the south to the northern tourist city Chiang Mai - thousands took part in similar runs, with participan­ts flashing the three-fingered salute as they took off from the starting line.

Prayut held onto power after elections last year, with support from an army-appointed senate.

He now holds a slim parliament­ary majority and faces a public increasing­ly vocal in its discontent with the sluggish economy and rule by elderly former generals.

A smaller, rival ‘Walk to Support Uncle’ rally took place in another park at the same time, drawing thousands of mainly elderly supporters of Prayut, whose nickname is ‘Uncle Tu’.

“We love our country, we love a government which can provide security to our country,” said 68 years old Vasuchart.

Famed Thai singer Au Haruethai, who attended the pro-Prayut walk, insisted the coup leader-turned-premier was elected ‘the democratic way’.

“People should not use the word ‘dictator’,” she said.

The anti-government run comes less than ten days before Thanathorn’s Future Forward Party faces possible dissolutio­n, accused of attempting to overthrow Thailand’s monarchy.

 ?? (AFP) ?? People warm up before a ‘run against dictatorsh­ip’, in Bangkok on Sunday
(AFP) People warm up before a ‘run against dictatorsh­ip’, in Bangkok on Sunday

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