BANGKOK – The van driver shot during the crackdown on Redshirt protesters in May 2010 says he wants to personally ask former PM Abhisit Vejjajeeva about the military operation that led to his injury.
Van Driver Injured By 2010 Crackdown Wants To Confront Abhisit
Rocker 'Sek Loso' Thanks Police For Helping Him Quit Drugs
(24 June)
The musician known for his rebellious attitude and drug abuses met with chief of police to declare
that he is no longer addicted to drugs.
Sek Loso, real name Seksan Sukpimai, was at the
center of massive scandal in late 2010 when his ex-wife published photos on Facebook which allegedly
show Mr. Seksan taking his meth.
In the Facebook posts she criticized the musician for
neglecting her and her children as he was always taking drugs or getting drunk. She also claimed Mr.
Seksan beat her time to time.
The image itself became viral on the online community, where
individuals doctored the image into more innocent-looking action like drinking orange juice or
blowing air into balloons.
Sek Loso eventually apologized to the public and agreed to
undergo a period of rehab. He was not charged with any crime; the police said drug addicts get
automatic amnesty from prosecution if they come forward and agree to be rehabilitated. Mr. Seksan
completed his rehab session in 2011.
Today, Mr. Seksan met with Pol.Gen. Adul Saengsingkaew,
chief of the Royal Thai Police, and told him that all the history of drugs use is far behind him.
He thanked Pol.Gen. Adul, who was the top official at the Office of the Narcotics Control
Board in 2010, for giving him a chance to cure himself of the drug abuse. Mr. Seksan said he had now
returned to his normal life with his family and resumed his music career recently.
The
singer also told Pol.Gen. Adul he has written and dedicated his new song to the police force. Mr.
Seksan said the song′s lyrics are about low-paid policeman who performs his service superbly to the
nation. He said he hoped the song would lend moral support to all the police officers.
Sek Loso projects
his style as a down-to-earth, bad boy rocker. His stagename – Loso – is a mock on the word
Hiso, which denotes the High Society, the elite, wealthy celebrities in
Thailand.
Activists Gather To Mark 81st Year Of Thai Democracy

(24 June) At dawn on this
day, 81 years ago, the People′s Party has established Constitutional regime for the progress of the
Nation.
That much was proclaimed on the small plaque placed somewhere on the eastern side of
Royal Plaza in Bangkok. Overshadowed by the statue of King Rama V where crowds of worshipers can be
seen praying to him on any given night, many Bangkokians have driven over that spot on their way to
work everyday without realizing the historic significance of the seemingly insignificant
memorial.
It is the memorial to the moment when Phraya Pahol Polpayuhasena, commander of the
military wing of the revolutionary People′s Party, stood at that very spot and declared to the
amassing troops on 24 June 1932 that the Siamese Absolute Monarchy had come to a bloodless end – and
thus began the era of constitutional democracy for the country.
Today, groups of activists,
Redshirts, and academics gathered around the plaque to commemorate the Revolution after overnight
series of events, performances, and fun fairs at the Royal Plaza.
Organizers distributed red
and white balloons to the participants. Some bore the words Abolish 112, referring to the
draconian lese majeste laws. Police officers stood nearby to direct the flow of morning
traffic.
Precisely at 06.00 – the time the coup plotters had agreed to converge their troops
into the Plaza – a representative of the activists stepped out and read the long, ferocious text of
the document known as Declaration of the People′s Party. The Declaration is believed to be authored
by Pridi Banomyong, the leader of the Party′s civilian wing, and was distributed to the curious
crowds in Bangkok on the day of Revolution.
The Declaration denounced the Absolute Monarchy
as oppressive regime that bankrupts the nation still reeling from financial crisis after the First
World War while enriching the aristocrats? wealth. It called on the King Rama VII to rule under a
constitution otherwise the plotters would establish a republican form of government in his
stead.
People, know that this land belong to all of you, not the monarchy as they have been
fooling you, the activist, Mr. Chainarin Gularb-aum, read out one of the most memorable lines of
the Declaration.
It also urged citizens to cooperate with the People′s Party, and promised
that the new government under democracy will provide basic needs for the people, claiming that in
due time he age of Sri Ariya (Buddhist Utopia) will arrive.
After the reading of the
Declaration, Mr. Suthachai Yimprasert, who teaches political history at Chulalongkorn University,
took the mic and told the audience why it′s necessary to honor the spirit of the 81 year old
Revolution. Before the People′s Party seized power from the King, he said, Siam was at the whim of
the monarch′s wishes with no legal or any meaningful restrain on the royal power.
The
Revolution has not only established an ordered, accountable political system under the constitution
and the parliament, he said, but also paved way for the rise of middle class, open education, and a
more egalitarian, more mobile society instead of the static feudal rule.
Without the
People′s Party, there would have been no democracy, and even though that democracy has seen so many
obstacles and setbacks, it still matters, Mr. Suthachai said.
Mai Neung Gor Guntee, an
activist poet well-known among the Redshirts, said to the crowd that we should remember how
disunited the People′s Party was in terms of their ideas. Some even harbored fascism, he said. Mai
Neung suggested that their ideological disunity eventually led to their dissolution before democracy
was substantially established.
Therefore, the democratic faction in our time must hold on to
principles very strictly, the poet said.
He also urged the crowd to remember that 2013 is
also 79th anniversary of the royalist Bovornradej Rebellion, the first armed challenge to the newly
established constitutional regime in Siam. He drew the parallel to the ongoing anti-government
protests which he said are disguised attempt to overthrow the electoral democracy.
We must
defend democracy and the parliament, Mai Neung said.
After the speeches, the crowd released
the balloons, and stepped forward to lay down flowers and candles around the plaque. The event
concluded around 07.00. Police officers almost immediately instructed the waiting street sweepers to
dispose the flowers and candles at the plaque, citing the need to clear the lane for rush hour
traffic.
Contrary to the low-key atmosphere in contemporary Thailand, 24 June in fact enjoyed
enormous importance in the past. It was even declared National Day by the government in 1938, and
only lost its hallowed status in 1960 when the palace-backed military dictatorship under Field
Marshal Sarit Thanarat changed the National Day to His Majesty the King′s birthday on 5
December
'White Masks' Organizers Say Their Group Not Involved In 7-11 Robbery
(24 June)
Individuals sporting Guy Fawkes masks robbed a convenience store in Bangkok′s Don Mueng area,
prompting the Facebook page of the anti-government group, which has adopted the White Masks as their
symbol, to deny any link to the robbery.
The robbery took place around 03.00 at 7-11 store
on Terd Rachan Road. The staff said the 2 assailants took 1,600 baht in cash from the cashier drawer
and 2 bottles of Johny Walker′s Black Label whiskey, which cost about 2,800 baht, before speeding
away on motorcycle. The 2 suspects reportedly completed their robbery within 40 seconds.
The
police are still searching for the suspects. They were described as no more than 170 centimeter
tall, wearing Guy Fawkes masks and black attire.
The incident coincided with the wave of
anti-government protests in recent weeks which saw the adoption of the White Masks as the
protesters? defiant symbols. The Redshirts had retaliated by holding their own counter-protests with
red-colored masks, sparking a new battle of colored politics.
The Facebook group ?V For
Thailand?, which has played crucial role in organizing the protests, took pain to state on Facebook
that the movement is not connected to the robbery in Don Mueng today. The statement also offered a
conspiracy theory that it was in fact the Redshirts who donned the White Masks and robbed the store
to discredit the group.
The greatness of the V crowd is expanding so fast that the
government resorts to any available means to stem it. The latest evil tactic by the Thaksin regime
and crooked politicians to discredit the White Masks is begun, the statement says, referring to
Former PM Thaksin Shinawatra, the center of the anti-government faction′s hatred.
The
democratically-elected Mr. Thaksin was ousted by military coup in 2006 but retained huge influence
in Thai politics. His sister Ms. Yingluck Shinawatra is the current Prime Minister. The White Masks
accuse Mr. Thaksin of passing down culture of autocracy and corruption to his proxy government.
Many of them also claim that Mr. Thaksin has anti-monarchy agenda.
'Celebratory Gunfires' Injure One And Narrowly Miss The Other

(23 June) A man was shot
by stray bullet as he sat in his car at Ayutthaya province, while a woman was almost hit by stray
bullet which penetrated down from her house′s ceiling. Both cases were said to result from
suspects who fired their weapons in celebration.
The first case was reported to have occurred
when Mr. Dharma Srimakom, 39, was sitting in his parked car at a market, waiting for his wife to do
her shopping. Just then, Mr. Dharma told police, a bullet fell down from the sky and hit his arm
that was resting on the vehicle′s side window.
Police later realized that the
moment of Mr. Dharma′s injury coincided with monk ordination ceremony at the nearby Luang Por
Kiew Temple, situated 500-700 meter away from Mr. Dharma′s car. The police said they have
arrested 2 suspects who confessed to discharging their firearms into the air as means of
celebration.
The suspects reportedly told police that they took turn to shoot a 9 m.m.
handgun as the monk-to-be around the temple. They said they had no idea the bullets might have hit
someone. The police charged the 2 suspects with illegal firearm carrying, and unauthorized
discharging of firearms in the public area.
On the same day, Ms. Napapon Saengpakdi, 37, a
resident of Pathumthani province, told local police that a handgun bullet has smashed via her house
ceiling into the kitchen sink where she was washing the dishes, narrowly missing her. She said
it′s very fortunate that the bullet has not hit any of the 6 relatives, including small
children, who were staying at her house at the time.
Pathumthani police said 2-3 bullets
have also fallen onto the streets near Ms. Napapon′s residence, suggesting that the shots were
fired in the air by celebratory gunmen. Police said they are investigating the
matter.
Although Thailand has strict laws concerning firearms, the regulation are not widely
enforced. Many Thais carried – mostly illegal – guns when they travel, and there have been
casualties caused by such celebratory gunfire in the past, especially during New Year
Day.
More Than 500 Pigs Killed At Lightning-Struck Farm
(23 June) Hundreds of
pigs at a farm in Prachinburi province were killed and injured after the farm was struck by
lightning, setting off a rapid firestorm.
Police received report about the incident around
00.30. When officers and rescue workers arrived at the scene – Somchit Farm in Kabinburi district –
they found heavily damaged pigsties filled with hundreds of dead pigs with burned injuries, while
injured pigs lay on the ground, baying their wretched cries.
Ms. Somchit Prakorbya, 52, the
owner of the farm, said that her farm supplies pork to the provincial branch of the food company
Betagro Group. She said she owned 1,474 pigs in total, many of them piglets.
The owner told
our correspondent there was lightning storm on the previous night, and suddenly a lightning has
struck in the middle of the pigsties, causing the blackout in the entire farm and igniting plastic
sheets which covered the pigsties. Ms. Somchit said she tried to dose the flame but failed, so she
called the emergency number. However, she said, by the time firefighters arrived most of the
pigsties are already burned down.
Reports said at least 500 pigs died. Ms. Somchit calculated
that the incident costs her 7-8 million bajt. The police said they would investigate for certain
whether the fire was caused by lightning or electric circuit.
Officials had buried the dead
pigs to prevent a pestilence, and the injured ones were sprayed with antibiotics. Mr. Pirayuth
Kruebkratoke, a representative of Betagro Group in the province, said he expected additional deaths
in the near future because many of the injured pigs suffered more than 50% burns on their
bodies.
Pheu Thai Denies Rumor Of Hong Kong Secret Cabinet Meeting

(23 June) The governing Pheu Thai Party dismissed reports that its
MPs and some Ministers are visiting Former PM Thaksin Shinawatra in Hong Kong to secretly discuss
about upcoming changes in the Cabinet.
Thai politicians are consulting Mr. Thaksin, the highly influential brother of current Prime
Minister Ms. Yingluck Shinawatra, in secret session about arranging new members of the
Cabinet.
spokesman, confirmed that Mr. Thaksin is currently in Hong Kong, after having traveled to Singapore,
but said that the former leader was there merely to meet with friends and business
partners.
belongs solely to the Prime Minister, Mr. Prompong said.
soon, but details about the change will depend on government′s policies. He insisted that even if
the Cabinet rearrangement would happen in near future, it has nothing to do with Mr. Thaksin′s trip
to East Asia. He asked the public not to link Mr. Thaksin with political development in
Thailand.
dissuade anyone, however, as Mr. Thaksin is thought to retain vast influence in Pheu Thai Party even
though it has been years since he was ousted from power by military coup in 2006. Mr. Thaksin is the
hate figure of the Yellowshirts who view Ms. Yingluck as proxy for her brother and have vowed to
oust her, too.
Students Severely Injured By 'Electric Shock' At Science Museum
(23 June) Ill-maintained electric circuit is thought to be responsible for the accident in
which 3 elementary school students were seriously injured after they touched a metal bar at a major
science museum in Prachuab Kiri Khan province.
in Prachuab Kiri Khan province was visiting Wakor Science Park, which is located in the same
province.
students, aged 8, 12, and 12, reportedly touched a metal railing in the museum′s astronomy section,
which was filled with leaked electricity from the building′s circuit.
The students were sent to the provincial hospital and their conditions were initially described as
seriously injured. However, their conditions are said to have improved, but doctors said the
patients will have to undergo brain checkup.
Police officers from Klong Warn police station
said the technicians at the museum told them that the establishment had been poorly maintained,
especially its electric circuit, which led to the accident.
Mr. Prakit Chansri, director of
Wakor Science Park, said he had closed off the museum temporarily in order to investigate the cause
of the electric shock closely. He told our correspondent that the investigation will be concluded
within 7 days, and the museum will pay all medical bills and any other compensation for the injured
students.
said the matter will be taken seriously as the museum is routinely visited by tourists and students
from many schools in the country.
history of modern science. King Rama IV (King Mongkut) traveled there with his entourage – including
many foreign astronomers – in 1868 to observe the solar eclipse he has predicted by modern
astronomy, a newly imported science in Siam at the time. However, the King died of malaria shortly
after the trip.
is also the name of the subforum which deals with science and technology in the hugely popular
Pantip website.
Clashes Narrowly Averted At Chiang Rai White Masks Rally
(23 June) Anti-government protests in Chiang Rai province were forced to call off their
rally early after some Redshirts showed up nearby to voice their displeasure but no clashes took
place.
14.00, around 20 anti-government protesters – which adopted Guy Fawkes masks as their dress
code – gathered at King Meng Rai monument in the town center. Approximately 50 Redshirts arrived
near the monument in their cars and trucks mounted with loudspeakers.
make speeches denouncing the so-called White Masks protesters. Around 100 police officers were
keeping close watch on the rival crowds. The anti-government disbanded their rally earlier than
planned, citing the fear for their safety.
Singhakrai Road, which is just 20 meter away from Muang Chiang Rai police station. They shouted
insults at the eatery′s owner, Ms. Chaliao Boonwanna, 61, who was reportedly responsible for
organizing the White Masks protest.
protesting in front of her shop, but clarified that she did not feel particularly threatened because
there were police officers monitoring the situation nearby. Nevertheless, she said the protesters
should respect the rights of other people to express their opinions.
are still residents of the same province, Ms. Chaliao said.
the Northern and Northeastern regions of Thailand, is known as stronghold of the Redshirts
movements.
the sporadic tension in the previous week.
front of the City Spirit Shrine. Representatives of the Redshirts in that province said they
had no intention to stage a counter-protest, but they will join the activities marking 81st
anniversary of 1932 Revolution in Bangkok tomorrow (24 June).
Sorn province – another Redshirt base – and some Redshirts were reportedly organizing their own
rally while police officers were deployed to keep the 2 factions separated. No violence or clash has
been reported, however.
the police estimated that at least 2,000-3,000 people joined the protest. The organizers of the
event did not provide their estimate.
hiccups, though, after the Central World shopping mall refused to let the protesters stage their
rally in their plaza like in previous weeks. The shopping mall management released a statement
saying they did not oppose any political group, and that their decision to turn away the protesters
was due to their principle of maintaining
eutrality.
Woman Says She's Threatened By Followers Of Controversial Monk
(22 June) The woman who
owned the land where the controversial wealthy monk has built his monastery says she is now being
threatened by his spiritual followers after she told the press she might recall the land rights
because she is disillusioned with the monk′s behavior.
Previously, Ms. Lon Manas, 68, a
resident of Sisaket province, has told the reporters that she donated the land to Luang Pu
Nen Kam Chattiko around 10 years ago, on the condition that Luang Pu Nen Kam would build a temple
and register it properly with the Office of National Buddhism (ONAB). However, the temple remains a
privately-operated one, and not under jurisdiction of the Buddhist authorities.
She had said
yesterday (21 June) she initially donated the land because she wanted to make good karma and
insisted that the temple be registered properly out of fear that an unregistered one will become
breeding ground for financial corruption.
Now, she fears that it is exactly what′s
happening, given the news about Luang Pu′s display of immense wealth that has been reported on the
media recently, so she expressed her intention to have the land taken back from Luang Pu Nen Kam and
given to some other monk for construction of a properly registered temple.
After the interview was published by many news agencies,
including the daily edition of Khaosod, a group of spiritual followers of the monk vehemently
denied the story. One of them is Mr. Pattaradech Sopanpanich, a businessman, who went on a popular talk show on
Channel 3 and alleged that the report published by Khaosod a is fabricated one.
Mr. Pattaradech has told the talk show host Mr. Sorayut Sutasanachinda that the reporters
pressed the matter on Ms. Lon and invented the story themselves.
Today, Ms. Lon told
our correspondent that she has received phone calls from many supporters of Luang Pu Nen Kam – who
is believed to command a considerable following among some businessmen and police officers –
threatening her that she might be abducted or even killed for telling the media about the plan to
evict the monk.
According to Ms. Lon, a woman who claimed to be a supporter of Luang Pu Nen Kam
also appeared at her residence and shouting insults at her. The woman also reportedly told Ms. Lon
to recant her story in front of the press, but she refused to do so. Ms. Lon said her family
eventually told the woman to leave the house.
Pol.Col. Phuchong Wanna, commissioner of local police, said he has
dispatched some police officers to protect Ms. Lon from any other potential intruder.
At the press conference in Pathumthani
province, a group of Luang Pu Nen Kam′s supporters denied the allegation that they have intimidated
Ms. Lon. Ms. Naruedee Piraroj, representative of the group, said she was the one who visited Ms. Lon
at her house. According to Ms. Naruedee, she was there to ask Ms. Lon whether she had talked to the
reporters about her intention to evict Luang Pu from the land.
She told me she did not, so I
beg her to clarify the story, but she told me she is feeling ill so she cannot talk to the press
right. I left shortly after that. I did not intimidate her in any way, Ms. Naruedee insisted.
Mr. Virord Chaipannana, director of ONAB′s
chapter in Sisaket, said that he believed Ms. Lon could take the matter to the court if she feels
that the land she donated to the monk was not being used in the manner both parties have initially
agreed.













































