ASIA HAND
Recollections, revelations of a protest leader
By Shawn W Crispin
BANGKOK - Media tycoon Sondhi Limthongkul [1] and the massive anti-government street protests he orchestrated set the stage for last year's military ouster of Thai prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra. Six months later, the outspoken Sondhi finds himself in the news again.
Last month he was sentenced by a Bangkok court to two years in prison on criminal defamation charges related to critical remarks
he made on his popular television talk show before last year's coup about a high-ranking Thai Rak Thai party official. Sondhi has appealed the decision and is currently on bail.
Meanwhile, the Thai Rak Thai-linked new satellite television station PTV is threatening to file libel charges against Sondhi for comments he made suggesting the new station's leader was involved with a petition aimed at ousting Privy Council President Prem Tinsulanonda, King Bhumibol Adulyadej's chief adviser. PTV organizers have recently tried to take a page from Sondhi's own rally playbook, but so far have been able to muster no more than 5,000 anti-government protesters.
Sondhi said during the interview that he has no immediate plans to return to the streets - neither to challenge PTV's Thai Rak Thai party representatives, nor to censure the interim government's sagging performance. Contrary to many pundits' predictions, Sondhi was not offered a position in the military-appointed administration after last year's coup. In an exclusive interview with Asia Times Online before his recent defamation conviction, he claims that as a "media man" he has no political ambitions.
He has recently locked horns with the country's new military leaders through programs aired over his satellite ASTV television station - similar, though not yet as fiery, to the programs that exposed and exploited Thaksin's political soft spots. In a wide-ranging 90-minute interview with ATol's Southeast Asia editor Shawn W Crispin, Sondhi reflected on his year of living dangerously and the country's perilous political road ahead.
Explain the situation behind last year's September 19 coup.
There are two theories. One is that they really wanted to get rid of Thaksin. They saw Thaksin was very detrimental to Thailand, particularly to the monarchy.
Who precisely?
All of them: the military, [Privy Council president] Prem ... You have to understand Thai politics. Whether you like it or not, since 1976 you cannot analyze political events without involving the monarchy institution. That's for sure.
The involvement of the king has depended on how severe the situation was. In certain circumstances, the king sends a mild signal and things come to an end. Sometimes the king has to come out - like he did with [coup leader] General Suchinda Kraprayoon to stop the fighting [in 1992] - and send a strong signal. But whatever the case, the request for military intervention or for the king to come out has always had one prerequisite: there must be bloodshed.
That old political theory, that there must be bloodshed for the king to intervene, did not work when its purpose was to get rid of Thaksin. So that more or less upset their planned solution. I remember vividly that when there was [street protest] against Thaksin, I always had people calling me: "Khun Sondhi, could you move things a little bit forward, have a little confrontation, let us see a little blood?"
Were these military people making the calls?
[Nods]. Or [Prime Minister] Surayud Chulanont ... I said no.
So did the Privy Council play any role in organizing the protests you often led?
No, no, not at all. They wanted to kick out Thaksin but they didn't have the people behind them. That's why they mumbled and grumbled behind Thaksin's back. And as time went by, they began to see their political base waning.
Whom are we talking about precisely?
I would call them the old feudalists. The feudal elite, people like the [Kasikorn Bank founders] Lamsam family, those types. They were beginning to see their power base decline slowly. When they saw Thaksin start intervening in areas that no politician [before] dared to intervene in, which included military reshuffles, they got even more scared.
That's the reason why they had to fight back. If you recall, the palace always insisted upon who would be the next commander-in-chief of the army. They would let go of the lower-ranking commanders, let Thaksin have them. That's why the [pre-cadet] Class 10 [2] came up and Thaksin was buying time. So when [General] Pravit [Wongsuwan] retired as army commander, it became [General] Sonthi [Boonyaratklin] - although Thaksin didn't want Sonthi. It took Sonthi almost a year to reshuffle all the regiments and regional commanders to prepare for a showdown with Thaksin.
But they could not move forward because they need the man, because without him they cannot fight. Unfortunately, there was a guy named Sondhi [Limthongkul]. [It was] unfortunate for myself too. I fought Thaksin and I was able to pull up the mass, and they were excited because [the elites] never thought in their minds - and later on they admitted it - that so many people would come out. So they were both shocked and ecstatic. So, all the elites were pulling all their forces behind me.
Who exactly? Are we talking about the likes of the Lamsam family?
I would never know, I would never know. I was never contacted personally and never carried money like 10 million baht, no. But it always came in: 100,000 [about US$3,000] here, 50,000 there, 100,000 here. There were so many one hundred thousands coming in.
So you became the traditional elites' de facto spokesman?
Exactly, exactly. The situation was coordinated ... The king
Continued
This was an extremely disturbing interview. This actually proves that there was a criminal conspiracy to overthrow the last legal government.
Now I understand why they don't want Thaksin back. If I was Thaksin, and power returned to me, I would go after all these conspirators.
Also, this interview proves that the PTV people have been telling the truth all along:
Prem, the palace, the military, Sondhi, and the old sakdina bureaucratic and business groups conspired to bring down Thaksin outside the auspices of the law.
In a civilized country, that would be called treason. In Thailand, business as usual.
On another note, Crispin should have asked Sondhi about his own personal relationship with Thaksin and their falling out because Thaksin refused to keep giving Sondhi billions of baht in unsecured loans for his failing businesses.
Personally, I don't trust Sondhi. I don't think he is a democrat and a liberal. This feud between Thaksin and Sondhi is nothing but a vendetta war between two Chinese mafiosi. Sondhi and the palace worked together to get rid of Thaksin, and now that Sondhi is no longer needed, he has decided to turn his vendetta towards his former allies by airing their collusion in public.
Controlling and narrowing civil society
2 weeks ago
7 comments:
Interesting interview.
Crusader's confession?
The judgement day is coming, so everybody want to correct the history pages.
Good blogging pointing it out, by the way.
The truth behind the Sept coup is being revealed slowly and people begin to know who was behind it and who benefits from this illegal act.
Guess who owns Asia Times?
So Shawn Crispin is interviewing his boss. Great forum for truth.
Agree with Fonzi that Sondhi is just a money-laundering crook.
Read Sondhi Limthongkul in Wikipedia as a good enough resource on the hypocrisy of this "man of the people"
.......especially the section entitled the Pro-Thaksin period, where his debts ..."that Manager Group owed to Krung Thai Bank was reduced from Bt1.8 billion to THB 200 million."
in 2001.
Really think the blogger should have know Sondhi's background and relationship to his own staff member.
Also look at The Nation's series in archive on Sondhi re: his financial return
Sondhi. What a ridiculous vehicle for his own agenda.
Ask people who worked for him at Asia Times print edition, and are owed millions of baht in back pay and a contribution scheme if they believe him, and why they weren't paid back after the miraculous resurrection of his business empire...
Ask the Thais and foreigners (including myself) who worked for him at Thai Day, the short-lived insert in the International Herald Tribune in Thailand how staff were treated while he was blowing money on protests instead of paying staff for months.
Past staff would love to know why he was flying to London and the US after the coup, instead of paying his staff.
He has no integrity, no shame.
bevan-
I already addressed your concerns to Crispin in a clarifying e-mail.
I haven't heard anything back yet.
Let you know what happens.
Is that the same Shawn Crispin who came out of the immigration detention centre, and made a Wai like a Pattaya sexpat with a belly full of beer and a week of bar girl cultural submersion under his belt?
http://www.apmforum.com/news/ap280202.htm
Charles-
I don't know if your aspersions are true, but it is the same guy.
Those guys had to go into hiding.
It was a scary time.
Do you remember what they wrote?
It was a little blurb that said that the king was not happy with the crown prince's "relationship" with Thaksin.
That was it.
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