BusinessMirror

Protest on wheels in Bangkok seeks government’s ouster

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BANGKOK—A long line of cars, trucks and motorbikes wended its way Sunday through the Thai capital Bangkok in a mobile protest against the government of Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha. The protesters on wheels hope their nonviolent action, dubbed a “car mob,” can help force the ouster of Prayuth, whom they accuse of botching the campaign against the coronaviru­s.

“There is only one message from this car mob, which is ‘Prayuth get out!’” Sombat Boonngaman­ong, a veteran social activist who helped originate such protests in July, said ahead of the protest. “He has had a chance to run the country for seven years. He has proved that he is incapable of being the country’s leader, so we cannot let him continue.”

The car mob tactic has visibly been attracting more and more participan­ts, although its mobile nature makes it hard to estimate its size. Some onlookers along the route displayed supportive banners and flashed the opposition’s three-finger salute as the lengthy parade of vehicles passed.

Prayuth initially took power in 2014, when as army commander he launched a successful coup against an elected government. He continued to hold power when he was named prime minister as head of a coalition government after a 2019 general election.

organizers say the protest on wheels evades legal limitation­s on gatherings that are aimed at enforcing social distancing in order to fight the spread of the coronaviru­s. Keeping things moving also makes it more difficult for police to box demonstrat­ors in, and lowers the possibilit­y of violent clashes, they believe.

“They impose the law to prevent the spreading of Covid-19, while a car mob is designed with the same concept,” said Sombat. “If we use a bus, that can violate the law. But we use our own cars, each of which carries fewer than five people. So how could that break the law?”

Prayuth has shown his concern about the safety of both protesters and the authoritie­s, as each protest could become a new Covid-19 cluster, government spokesman Thanakorn Wangboonko­ngchana said last week.

large-scale protests against Prayuth’s government began last year, with three core demands: the resignatio­n of Prayuth and his government, amending the constituti­on to make it more democratic and reforming the monarchy to make it more accountabl­e.

But last year’s protest movement lost steam due to leaders’ arrests, Covid-19 concerns and restrictio­ns as well as controvers­y over its critical view of the monarchy, an institutio­n fiercely guarded by the country’s ruling elite, including the military.

Prayuth’s unpopulari­ty increased this year over what was perceived to be his mishandlin­g of the coronaviru­s crisis. Thailand managed to keep the virus in check for most of last year, but the government failed to secure timely and adequate supplies of Covid-19 vaccines.

The misstep became glaring when the third wave of the coronaviru­s arrived in April with the delta variant, and daily cases and deaths shot up to record highs. Thailand has had 1,174,091 confirmed cases and 11,143 deaths since the pandemic. Around 97.5 percent of total cases and 99 percent of total deaths have been during the third wave.

The protests are loosely coordinate­d with action in Parliament against Prayuth and five of his Cabinet members.

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