Fear and loathing marks Thailand’s malicious monarchy

Thailand’s monarchy is an affront to democracy. James Anstruther reports on how King Bhumibol Adulyadej crushes all dissent

by Tribune Web Editor
Thursday, May 7th, 2009

Thailand’s monarchy is an affront to democracy. James Anstruther reports on how King Bhumibol Adulyadej crushes all dissent

THE King of Thailand, Bhumibol Adulyadej, is apparently thinking about going on a state visit to India. This is unusual, as the 82-year-old monarch largely gave up on such foreign trips in the 1960s. Even before then, he only went to see allies who would be useful in the Cold War fight against the left. Thus, while he visited South Vietnam in 1959, he has never been to North Vietnam or even Thailand’s neighbours, Laos and Cambodia.

He is understood to feel that his dharma-raja, or kingly virtue, is required at home to protect his kingdom from unseemly division and tribulation – such as the political crisis that has been played out on the streets of Bangkok for the past three years. But he could be about to make an exception for India, which he previously shunned because of its left-wing politics and friendship with the Soviet Union.

It is from India that Bhumibol’s kingly virtue derives. He is regarded by his supporters as a personification of the Hindu god Narayana (an avatar of Vishnu). The Hindu tradition is overlaid on an otherwise Buddhist monarchy.

And there is much need of the king’s dharma at home. After all, there have been frequent coups since Bhumibol ascended the throne in 1946 following the death from gunshot wounds of his brother, who had been king for just three months. Bhumibol, who in common with many Thais is very keen on firearms, was in the palace at the time, but has never been publicly blamed for the shooting.

Not all of the coups since his accession have had the king’s approval. However, the most recent one, in September 2006 against Thaksin Shinawatra, the country’s only genuinely elected prime minister, most definitely did.

The king is usually described in Thailand as a constitutional monarch, but there have been 17 written constitutions since the supposed end of absolute monarchy in 1932. These constitutions usually specify a parliamentary system, but some have required a military dictatorship. But they all feature the semi-divine nature of the king and all include provisions for lèse-majesté – a ban on insulting or even criticising the monarch, his immediate family or the institution itself.

In recent years, it has never been the king himself who institutes lèse-majesté proceedings, as this can safely be left to politicians, generals or even members of the public. The accusations come in vast numbers and the police are required to investigate all such tip-offs, however petty they may seem. The minimum sentence is three years in prison. While only those cases featuring unfortunate foreigners are widely reported abroad, jail sentences for Thai citizens committing lèse-majesté are usually harsher than those for foreigners.

Bhumibol was born in the United States while his father was studying at Harvard. He spent the Second World War at school in Switzerland. To act as his latest prime minister he has turned to another foreign-born Thai, the 44-year-old Abhisit Vejjajiva, the son of a Wallsend doctor. Abhisit, who was educated at Eton and Oxford, is apparently a good friend of Boris Johnson – although it is difficult to say which of the two has more to be ashamed of here.

Thaksin, the prime minister overthrown by the last coup, was the country’s first modern politician. He actually went campaigning for votes rather than politicking in Bangkok drawing rooms. His was the only government ever to have had an absolute majority in parliament, and it brought in a series of highly popular measures to alleviate rural poverty. Thaksin set up the country’s first universal healthcare programme.

A former policeman who had become a billionaire businessman, Thaksin has a little reminiscent of Italy’s Silvio Berlusconi about him and his policies were not always well thought-through. His highly confrontational actions against Muslim separatists in four southern provinces, along with a violent and unrestrained anti-drugs campaign, led to many avoidable deaths. But he was hugely popular in the countryside, with his triumphant re-election in 2005 attracting the highest voter turnout in Thai history.

It was not his policies that led to Thaksin’s downfall. In fact, it was his very popularity that sealed his doom. As he could not be beaten at the polls, a coup was only way to get rid of him. The generals accused him of corruption and, of course, lèse-majesté. His travels around the country in search of votes were making him popular. And being popular was the role of the king, not a politician, a mere commoner and particularly not of someone with Chinese blood. This meant he wanted to overthrow the king and set up a republic – or so it was claimed.

The generals ruled by themselves for more than a year, before establishing yet another constitution and holding new elections. They banned Thaksin’s party, but its successor grouping still managed to win.

The new government was under persistent attack from far-right royalist thugs and was harried from pillar to post. Eventually, a few of its parliamentary supporters were bought off. Reports suggest that some of them might have received payments of $3 million each to switch sides. And so Abhisit, the 44-year-old Old Etonian, was appointed premier. The party he leads, the Democrats, is Thailand’s oldest, having been established in 1946 to champion the cause of Thai royalty.

Since the coup, Thaksin has been on the run from Thai prosecutors and their army backers, who have convicted him in his absence. Nominally because of that conviction, he was banned from visiting Britain after the Thais applied diplomatic pressure. What, you might ask, was the concept of political asylum invented for?

Thaksin, who now travels on a Nicaraguan diplomatic passport, has been seen in places such as Hong Kong and Dubai, from where he speaks by video-link to vast crowds of his Thai supporters, who are demanding fresh elections to choose a government with a genuinely popular mandate.

They are unlikely get these elections until the present government finds some way of preventing Thaksin’s allies from winning. Meanwhile, the supposedly pro-business Democrat regime presides over a downward economic spiral.

But the elderly king cannot last forever. Might his successor usher in a new era of calm, democracy and prosperity? That is very unlikely. Like so many of the Thai elite, the heir to the throne, the thuggish Vajiralongkorn, now aged 56, went to a fee-charging school in England – Millfield, which has “non-academic” selection criteria.

He is loathed and feared throughout Thailand – although he, too, is covered by the lèse-majesté laws. He is going to need them.

James Anstruther is a journalist who worked in Thailand until recently. This is an assumed name

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  • John

    When the domestic political situation looks dreadful for the left, the Tribue focuses on some foreign ‘right wing’ establishment. Why don’t you grow up you wankers.

  • John

    When the domestic political situation looks dreadful for the left, the Tribue focuses on some foreign ‘right wing’ establishment. Why don’t you grow up you wankers.

  • Stan

    The article comes really short on proof but rich in accusations. “The King most definitely approved the recent coup” – is that all? For six decades of alleged meddling in politics?

    The author also conveniently forgot to mention massive street protests against “popular” Thaksin, on a scale Bangkok hasn’t seen since 1992 uprising against military rule, and led by the same people.

    Preventing those street clashes betweein rival camps was one of the first reasons for the coup, and the military didn’t invent charges of corruption and lese majeste, they have been rallying points against Thaksin for over a year, and they turned out to be true, in retrospect.

  • Stan

    The article comes really short on proof but rich in accusations. “The King most definitely approved the recent coup” – is that all? For six decades of alleged meddling in politics?

    The author also conveniently forgot to mention massive street protests against “popular” Thaksin, on a scale Bangkok hasn’t seen since 1992 uprising against military rule, and led by the same people.

    Preventing those street clashes betweein rival camps was one of the first reasons for the coup, and the military didn’t invent charges of corruption and lese majeste, they have been rallying points against Thaksin for over a year, and they turned out to be true, in retrospect.

  • Batman

    “the country’s only genuinely elected prime minister, most definitely did.Popular my ass. Please watch this if you really want to know what the Thai people really think of him.
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mdzJ1NNzn8o or watch this clip to see what a stupid ass he is http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mdzJ1NNzn8o He is such a cool rapper!

  • Batman

    “the country’s only genuinely elected prime minister, most definitely did.Popular my ass. Please watch this if you really want to know what the Thai people really think of him.
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mdzJ1NNzn8o or watch this clip to see what a stupid ass he is http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mdzJ1NNzn8o He is such a cool rapper!

  • http://www.thekoratpost.com Frank G Anderson

    It’s a tough call any way you look at it to get accurate and dependable information on the Thai monarchy. Almost everything available in kingdom is fundamentalist-right wing pro-monarchy and the country’s censorship and criminal justice system are kiltered to favor and savor silence and obedience. Perhaps most amazingly is that what is regarded as the country’s most corrupt institution, the Royal Thai Police, is used as the vanguard to protect the country’s highest institution. Surely there is some irony in this.

  • http://www.thekoratpost.com Frank G Anderson

    It’s a tough call any way you look at it to get accurate and dependable information on the Thai monarchy. Almost everything available in kingdom is fundamentalist-right wing pro-monarchy and the country’s censorship and criminal justice system are kiltered to favor and savor silence and obedience. Perhaps most amazingly is that what is regarded as the country’s most corrupt institution, the Royal Thai Police, is used as the vanguard to protect the country’s highest institution. Surely there is some irony in this.

  • http://www.thekoratpost.com Frank G Anderson

    I neglected to add that there is often a mandatory 84 day pre-charge imprisonment, broken down into twelve day extensions. This provision is ostensibly to prevent lese majeste ‘martyrs’ from fleeing or repeating their ‘crimes.’ But we have a current case of police ineptitude – that of the prime minister’s near miss in Pattaya. According to reports, police have not been able to pursue charges against anyone because “they are unfamiliar with operating equipment used to view taped evidence!”

  • http://www.thekoratpost.com Frank G Anderson

    I neglected to add that there is often a mandatory 84 day pre-charge imprisonment, broken down into twelve day extensions. This provision is ostensibly to prevent lese majeste ‘martyrs’ from fleeing or repeating their ‘crimes.’ But we have a current case of police ineptitude – that of the prime minister’s near miss in Pattaya. According to reports, police have not been able to pursue charges against anyone because “they are unfamiliar with operating equipment used to view taped evidence!”

  • Rick Price

    Article under assumed name? hmmm

    Malicious monarchy? There is nothing based on fact in this article that comes close to real evidence. In fact, Thai people know that HM the King is above politics, and has intervened sparingly in politics and coups, so as not to squander the respect of the people.

    If the author lived in Thailand I would expect a bit more real information/facts in such an article.

    There is no connection and no valid point as to where HM the King and the current Prime Minister were born. HM the King’s father, Prince Mahaidon studied medicine abroad, to care for Thai people first in Thonburi, then in Chiang Mai. The late Princess Mother followed the direction of the Royal Court after the death of her husband, to educate her 3 children in Switzerland before and during WW II.

    The death of HM King Ananda is still sad to the Royal Family and to Thai people. There was a trial, and sentences were made afterwards.

    As to the travels of HM the King, the author could have mentioned the King (Ny Luang to Thai people)travels extensively in Thailand having worked on more than 3,000 projects for the betterment of life for Thai people.

    Thaksin is not the first modern politician. In fact, his history goes back to the 1970s as “runner” for the PM, when Thaksin was a young police officer, who had married the Deputy Police chief’s daughter.

    While Thaksin’s first election may have offered business based solutions derived from his Shin Corp products and services, his 2nd election (a snap election), is not validated as a fair election (vote buying, etc). In the end his tactics were not new, and injurious to anyone who opposed him. Summary executions of drug suspects in the Northeast, and atrocities again Thai Muslims in the South. Shameful, and worthy of investigation by the World Court (check Amnesty International website).

    It is Thaksin who has not returned to Thailand after his travels to the Beijing Olympics.

    I am surprised this newspaper would publish an article under an assumed name. I hope you will send your reporter for more training, as the time he spent in Thailand was not spent getting close to the facts.

    I wish the new Prime Minister success in unifying Thai politics in a unique democracy. I also wish good health and long life to HM the King, and the entire Royal Family.

  • Rick Price

    Article under assumed name? hmmm

    Malicious monarchy? There is nothing based on fact in this article that comes close to real evidence. In fact, Thai people know that HM the King is above politics, and has intervened sparingly in politics and coups, so as not to squander the respect of the people.

    If the author lived in Thailand I would expect a bit more real information/facts in such an article.

    There is no connection and no valid point as to where HM the King and the current Prime Minister were born. HM the King’s father, Prince Mahaidon studied medicine abroad, to care for Thai people first in Thonburi, then in Chiang Mai. The late Princess Mother followed the direction of the Royal Court after the death of her husband, to educate her 3 children in Switzerland before and during WW II.

    The death of HM King Ananda is still sad to the Royal Family and to Thai people. There was a trial, and sentences were made afterwards.

    As to the travels of HM the King, the author could have mentioned the King (Ny Luang to Thai people)travels extensively in Thailand having worked on more than 3,000 projects for the betterment of life for Thai people.

    Thaksin is not the first modern politician. In fact, his history goes back to the 1970s as “runner” for the PM, when Thaksin was a young police officer, who had married the Deputy Police chief’s daughter.

    While Thaksin’s first election may have offered business based solutions derived from his Shin Corp products and services, his 2nd election (a snap election), is not validated as a fair election (vote buying, etc). In the end his tactics were not new, and injurious to anyone who opposed him. Summary executions of drug suspects in the Northeast, and atrocities again Thai Muslims in the South. Shameful, and worthy of investigation by the World Court (check Amnesty International website).

    It is Thaksin who has not returned to Thailand after his travels to the Beijing Olympics.

    I am surprised this newspaper would publish an article under an assumed name. I hope you will send your reporter for more training, as the time he spent in Thailand was not spent getting close to the facts.

    I wish the new Prime Minister success in unifying Thai politics in a unique democracy. I also wish good health and long life to HM the King, and the entire Royal Family.

  • Roland

    This article looks like something that was kept under wraps while the author was in Thailand, and is published now that he’s safe. The lese majeste law is being applied more ferociously against foreign media now than ever before, and what he writes could certainly never have been published while he was in Thailand.

    At the same time it’s very disappointing for its lack of factual background. It breaks no new ground.

    By the way, the comment by Rick Price is pure royalist boilerplate. I see the same statements in Thai newspapers and blogs every day. It’s too bad, because there is a lot of maneuvering going on in the palace and the military in anticipation of the succession, and none of it can be spoken of or written in public. While I have great respect and affection for HMK, his health has been poor for several years now, and he was not even able to deliver his traditional birthday speech last December. Some of what is happening in Thailand now seems to be from different factions in the palace and the military taking action that they think helps the monarchy but instead is undermining public confidence in the institution.

  • Roland

    This article looks like something that was kept under wraps while the author was in Thailand, and is published now that he’s safe. The lese majeste law is being applied more ferociously against foreign media now than ever before, and what he writes could certainly never have been published while he was in Thailand.

    At the same time it’s very disappointing for its lack of factual background. It breaks no new ground.

    By the way, the comment by Rick Price is pure royalist boilerplate. I see the same statements in Thai newspapers and blogs every day. It’s too bad, because there is a lot of maneuvering going on in the palace and the military in anticipation of the succession, and none of it can be spoken of or written in public. While I have great respect and affection for HMK, his health has been poor for several years now, and he was not even able to deliver his traditional birthday speech last December. Some of what is happening in Thailand now seems to be from different factions in the palace and the military taking action that they think helps the monarchy but instead is undermining public confidence in the institution.

  • http://- Topani

    nothing wrong with what Thai king fomented against Thaksin who was once a prime minister of Thai because he is a king of Thai….Thai belongs to him, and there is another problem with that is Thai don’t belong to Thai people

    freedom is a laughing matter never implemented for poor Thai people as of Les Majestic law which kills good people without justification

  • Royalist

    Arjan Jai, is that you? I kid, I kid. But really if it’s you, I would expect a little more from you. You see, this is an example of what one gets when one uses an “assumed” name. In other words, not much good would come out of it.

    On a more serious note, the author fails to mention how a former policeman just happens to become a billionaire. And I contend (without any evidences, mind you — but really not different from the way the author fabricates his piece) that Thaksin bought and bribed his way to being a billionaire. It is the tactic that he knows and uses well his whole life during both business and political campaigns.

    Those that his money cannot buy are branded anti-democracy, backward, extremist right-wing, and of course royalists.

    There is no such thing as right or left wings in Thailand. It’s cost and benefit all the way, baby.

    The author tries (and fails) to suggest that Thaksin’s popularity against that of the King is his downfall. I argue that it is his corruptness that had finally caught up to him.

    To strengthen my point above, I suggest the author to remember (or study) that it is King Bhumibol who brought the Thai Monarchy from the brink of abolishment during the King Rama 7′s era to being the most stable and loved institution in Thai history by working his way to it. And that, in my opinion, is the foundation that does not worth a popularity contest to any mere politician, especially the corrupted ones (or is there any other types?).

    One must also remembers that, nearing the end of Thaksin’s regime, Thailand was in chaos. There was seemingly no way out and when the tanks finally came out of their camp there was a sign of relief everywhere even among Thaksin’s campers. I again contend the author to argue against this.

    So please, leave the King out of it. It’s so easy (and harmful) to spread the blame to others outside your own camp, especially without any solid evidence to support it, under an assumed name.

  • Royalist

    Arjan Jai, is that you? I kid, I kid. But really if it’s you, I would expect a little more from you. You see, this is an example of what one gets when one uses an “assumed” name. In other words, not much good would come out of it.

    On a more serious note, the author fails to mention how a former policeman just happens to become a billionaire. And I contend (without any evidences, mind you — but really not different from the way the author fabricates his piece) that Thaksin bought and bribed his way to being a billionaire. It is the tactic that he knows and uses well his whole life during both business and political campaigns.

    Those that his money cannot buy are branded anti-democracy, backward, extremist right-wing, and of course royalists.

    There is no such thing as right or left wings in Thailand. It’s cost and benefit all the way, baby.

    The author tries (and fails) to suggest that Thaksin’s popularity against that of the King is his downfall. I argue that it is his corruptness that had finally caught up to him.

    To strengthen my point above, I suggest the author to remember (or study) that it is King Bhumibol who brought the Thai Monarchy from the brink of abolishment during the King Rama 7′s era to being the most stable and loved institution in Thai history by working his way to it. And that, in my opinion, is the foundation that does not worth a popularity contest to any mere politician, especially the corrupted ones (or is there any other types?).

    One must also remembers that, nearing the end of Thaksin’s regime, Thailand was in chaos. There was seemingly no way out and when the tanks finally came out of their camp there was a sign of relief everywhere even among Thaksin’s campers. I again contend the author to argue against this.

    So please, leave the King out of it. It’s so easy (and harmful) to spread the blame to others outside your own camp, especially without any solid evidence to support it, under an assumed name.

  • WeAreThePeople

    This is a good article summarizing Thailand’s situation. The author mentioned correctly that Thaksin’s actions led to many avoidable deaths. Consequently, Thaksin should be made responsible for any avoidable injury or death like any other person should be made responsible for any avoidable injury or death.

    Yet, it is also important to mention that Thaksin’s government was the only ever to have had an absolute majority in Thai parliament.

    It seems well remembered by some folks that this elected Prime Minister also has made his way to being a billionaire. Only, HM the King has during the last decades made his way to being the richest monarch of the world, exceeding the fortune of the monarch of the United Arabic Emirates, exceeding Thaksin’s fortune multiple times nevertheless. Understandably, this makes it difficult to comprehend that HM the King is working for the betterment of Thailand’s poor despite these 3,000 or so projects that are eagerly used in the media, leaving many people wondering about their value for Thailand’s underprivileged.

    How much need certain military factions certain factions inside the palace? How much does the palace depend on the military? If one still wants to ignore the points above, one question would, however, remain:

    Why Thaksin has not been removed from power by democratic means (…and therefore, giving Thai people a chance bringing him to justice)?

    I am wishing all people living in Thailand equal opportunities.

  • WeAreThePeople

    This is a good article summarizing Thailand’s situation. The author mentioned correctly that Thaksin’s actions led to many avoidable deaths. Consequently, Thaksin should be made responsible for any avoidable injury or death like any other person should be made responsible for any avoidable injury or death.

    Yet, it is also important to mention that Thaksin’s government was the only ever to have had an absolute majority in Thai parliament.

    It seems well remembered by some folks that this elected Prime Minister also has made his way to being a billionaire. Only, HM the King has during the last decades made his way to being the richest monarch of the world, exceeding the fortune of the monarch of the United Arabic Emirates, exceeding Thaksin’s fortune multiple times nevertheless. Understandably, this makes it difficult to comprehend that HM the King is working for the betterment of Thailand’s poor despite these 3,000 or so projects that are eagerly used in the media, leaving many people wondering about their value for Thailand’s underprivileged.

    How much need certain military factions certain factions inside the palace? How much does the palace depend on the military? If one still wants to ignore the points above, one question would, however, remain:

    Why Thaksin has not been removed from power by democratic means (…and therefore, giving Thai people a chance bringing him to justice)?

    I am wishing all people living in Thailand equal opportunities.

  • Demasking

    America has much responsibility for supporting the royalist right wing forces-who massacre Muslims and students any one who dissents-given their anti-communist mania this has helped prevent the Thai people from gaining their freedom and a real peoples democracy thanks a lot American fascists!

  • Demasking

    America has much responsibility for supporting the royalist right wing forces-who massacre Muslims and students any one who dissents-given their anti-communist mania this has helped prevent the Thai people from gaining their freedom and a real peoples democracy thanks a lot American fascists!

  • http://www.thmnews.com Thai News

    I really hate the current situation here in Bangkok. It affects my sales, my life and and and. When is it going to end …

  • http://www.thmnews.com Thai News

    I really hate the current situation here in Bangkok. It affects my sales, my life and and and. When is it going to end …

  • Jason Brisbane

    Oh no, god forbid peoples holiday lifestyles hinging and the poor masses of thailand and its neighbouring counties, are ever affected.

  • Jason Brisbane

    Oh no, god forbid peoples holiday lifestyles hinging and the poor masses of thailand and its neighbouring counties, are ever affected.

  • Anne

    I could not help feeling cheated out of 5 minutes reading this article. Not only do you make some broad defamatory remarks regarding HM the King of Thailand, but you fail to balance the article with the good that he has brought to the nation.

    It is easy for the western world to put the third world in a box. You have completely removed Thai culture out of your commentary… The King is revered by his subjects because he has provided the country with a number of public services, programmes, new technologies and developments. He has helped a great number of Thailand’s poor and continues to educate and create jobs for people all over the country.

    His involvement with representation is limited- although he has made a number of public remarks during his birthday (for example) to create a state of calm, he is unable to do much if the people of Thailand themselves are divided on who they want to be democratically governed by.

    People do not fear the King, they respect him like a wise leader. Do not be fooled by the wearer of the crown, nobody is ready for the Crown Prince to take over. He is merely a spoilt boy with numerous lovers and a passion to fly commercial 747′s. He’ll never get the respect his father has.

  • Anne

    I could not help feeling cheated out of 5 minutes reading this article. Not only do you make some broad defamatory remarks regarding HM the King of Thailand, but you fail to balance the article with the good that he has brought to the nation.

    It is easy for the western world to put the third world in a box. You have completely removed Thai culture out of your commentary… The King is revered by his subjects because he has provided the country with a number of public services, programmes, new technologies and developments. He has helped a great number of Thailand’s poor and continues to educate and create jobs for people all over the country.

    His involvement with representation is limited- although he has made a number of public remarks during his birthday (for example) to create a state of calm, he is unable to do much if the people of Thailand themselves are divided on who they want to be democratically governed by.

    People do not fear the King, they respect him like a wise leader. Do not be fooled by the wearer of the crown, nobody is ready for the Crown Prince to take over. He is merely a spoilt boy with numerous lovers and a passion to fly commercial 747′s. He’ll never get the respect his father has.