Google
 
Showing posts with label Prachatai. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Prachatai. Show all posts

Saturday, October 27, 2007

Prachatai: Giles lashes fellow academics in Chula’s Political Science Faculty: ‘Corrupt and disgusting’

Giles Ungpakorn has condemned his colleagues at Chulalongkorn University's Faculty of Political Science for serving dictatorship and being corrupt.

The outspoken leftist academic and anti-coup activist yesterday publicly lambasted the executives and other lecturers of his faculty for committing ‘policy corruption' by spending 42.6 million baht of taxpayers' money on a research project on democracy.


He said the executives and nearly all the lecturers in the faculty were staunch critics of the previous Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra and his policy corruption and vested interests, and they supported the Sept 19 coup last year. After the coup, they have become advisors to the junta and the junta-installed government. Some of them helped draft the junta's charter, and some are still members of the National Legislative Assembly.


These academics have turned a blind eye to the ban on sales of anti-coup books in the university's bookstores, including Giles' own A Coup for the Rich. And Giles has been undergoing a disciplinary investigation by the faculty for his anti-coup activities, Giles said.


The faculty's research project, Thailand Democracy Watch, has received 42.6 million baht of taxpayers' money, with the Dean of the Faculty Jaras Suwanmala as chief researcher. Jaras has led a team of Chula Political Science lecturers on overseas trips to defend the junta in universities in Australia and the UK, using taxpayers' money, Giles said.


Giles said that the researchers had claimed that Thai society's ignorance of history was to blame for the political vicious circle, which is a cycle of elections and coups d'etat. And they also blamed the poor people, who have the majority votes in general elections, of accepting corruption, seeking only immediate gains, and being irrational.

link


These Thai academics blame the poor for voting for corrupt politicians, yet these same academics work with the politicians and generals who do all the corrupting. You can follow up on this in another Prachatai article Democracy for Sale.


Further, what is striking is that these academics who blame the poor for destroying democracy are the same academics who support military coups.


I guess logic, integrity and intellectual consistency don't exist in the Thai academy.


I don't agree with Ajarn Jai's political ideology most of the time, but I support his courage and criticism.



Sunday, September 9, 2007

Prachatai: More on the Incarceration of Sombat Boon-ngam-anong

Prachatai really has been doing an excellent job of covering the incarceration of Sombat Boon-ngam-anong. Of course, the mainstream media will ignore him or paint him as a stooge of Thaksin.

I have already blogged his letter to Lt. Gen Saprang.

Khun Sombat is a political prisoner, as the 19 Sept. Anti- Coup Network and the Asian Human Rights Commision have noted here and here.

As the 19 Sept Anti-Coup Network has pointed in its appeal, the charges against Khun Sombat are without merit and his actions were constitutional.


In pursuance to this case, the 19 Sept Network would like make known the following:


1. We maintain that Lt. Gen. Saprang and his cronies under the name of the "Council for Democratic Reform under the Constitutional Monarchy" have falsely claimed legitimacy from the monarchy to commit the coup on 19 September 2006. This action is a blatant offence under Section 113 of the Penal Code which states that;


"Whoever commits an act of violence or threatens to commit an act of violence in order to:


(1) overthrow or change the Constitution


(2) overthrow a legislative power, the executive power or the judicial power of the Constitution, or nullify such power; or


(3) separate the Kingdom or seize power of administration in any part of the Kingdom

is said to commit insurrection, and shall be punished with death or imprisonment for life"


Therefore, the act of civil disobedience committed by Mr. Sombat Boon-ngam-anong against an illegitimate action is not only legal, but also a justified exercise of constitutional rights provided for by both Section 65 of the 1997 Constitution and Section 69 of the 2007 Constitution, which states that "A person shall have the right to resist peacefully any act committed for the acquisition of the power to rule the country by a means which is not in accordance with the modes provided in this Constitution."


2. We deem that the detention order by the Criminal Court shows that the Thai justice system has been all along founded on the principle of "power is righteousness, but righteousness is power". As a result, the police simply become an apparatus for the powers that be to use legal loopholes to abet the violation of people's rights. Meanwhile, the court is similarly used to legitimize the illegal actions.


Last but not least, we maintain that the case is not a personal libel between Lt. Gen. Saprang Kalayanamitr vs. Mr. Sombat Boon-ngam-anong, but a battle between the blatant offence of the coup versus the civil right to oppose coups and to freedom of expression. A judgment that endorses the victory of the coup makers will simply show that the courts have become part of the efforts to legitimize illegal actions.



The AHRC has also protested this action as a violation of Khun Sombat's political and human rights:


AHRC
05 September 2007
Pick to Post

Dear friends,

The Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) has received information that anti-coup activist Sombat Boon-ngam-anong is detained with pending charges of criminal defamation after he expressed opinions against the coup leaders. The AHRC calls for your immediate action to urge the case to be withdrawn.


CASE DETAILS:


Sombat is the leader of the Citizens against the Coup Group organised after the September military takeover last year. He organised a mock dart game with General Saprang Kalayanamitr and General Sonthi Boonyaratglin as targets in an anti-coup demonstration from 24 June to 3 July in Sanam Luang, a public area in Central Bangkok. Two criminal libel cases were then filed against him by the two generals, who claimed that Sombat's action was an insult to their honour and dignity.


Sombat was informed by Chanasongkram Police that an arrest warrant was issued against him on 31 August. He went to the police station on the same day and is now detained in Special Bangkok Prison, Klongprem, Ladyao after the Criminal Court granted a 12-day detention order. Sombat did not apply for bail, as he believes that there are no rights and freedom for him in Thailand even outside the prison.


ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:


Criminal defamation is punished under section 328 of the Penal Code and the offence is punishable for a fine up to 200,000 Thai Baht (approx. 6,000 USD) and two years' imprisonment. It contravenes with the freedom of expression which is protected under the 2007 Constitution and the International Covenant of Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) which Thailand is a state party. The AHRC has for some years called for the criminal defamation law in Thailand to be scrapped altogether: see for instance, AS-038-2005; AS-032-2004.


One can also read an interview with Khun Sombat in Prachatai:


Prachatai - How did the darts game that resulted in the libel suit come about?


Sombat - We had this activity during the rally of UDD at Sanam Luang and I started to organize the Sanam Luang volunteer group. Among us, we realized that the atmosphere of the rally had become too bland; there were just speeches, and the audience had nothing to do but listen. We just wanted to make it more colourful. So we started to put on an exhibition to educate people and some volunteers proposed games such as "dunking the maiden" and a darts game, and I agreed with them.

We had cartoons of the coup ringleaders as the targets for people to throw darts at. Most people who joined us came from grassroots communities and they enjoyed the game, it made them feel relaxed. We had cartoons of four figures including Sondhi Boonyaratkalin, Sondhi Limthongkul, Saprang Kalayanamitr, and Pah (General Prem Tinsulanond), but it was Saprang who sued me (later General Sondhi asked to be co-plaintiff in the case as well -- Prachatai).


I could not imagine this could have made a case. But I am not terrified by this. Since I learned about this (lawsuit), I did not take it seriously. But an incident that happened to one of our female volunteers, Bussaba, who looked after the darts game, made me concerned. She had been followed for three days from Sanam Luang to her home. And on the fourth day, she was grabbed by the arms by two men who told that "you shall not go to Sanam Luang or Rattanakosin Hotel (where we had a war room) again. Otherwise, you will be killed". And then she was punched hard in stomach and fell unconscious. After two days in hospital, she regained consciousness. The incident can be confirmed from the hospital records.

After she was discharged from hospital, she told no one about this. Later she spotted the guys again on the other side of the street pointing at her, so she just had to run away in a cab. That happened about the middle of last month, around the time that Chakrapob's driver, Ole, was beaten up.


You can read the rest of the interview here.



Here are a couple money quotes:


From the point of view of those who accept the coup, it is better now than under Thaksin?


But can I have the rights to oppose now? Just say it out loud that you really endorse the coup. Just speak up. I have not seen any NGO that has enough courage to come out to speak up. They all take the line that "well, we do not accept it, but...". No one says it clearly (that they endorse the coup). But we do declare our opposition to the coup. But we don't have any space to say this, do we? You may not trust the politicians, the PTV folks who come out to rally, but you cannot doubt people like Dr. Weng (Tochirakarn). It's not like that. You simply try to find justification to destroy the persons who you know do not work for Thaksin. It's like a gunman who looks for a justification for shooting somebody. But if you look into people's eyes you will see humanity.


I think NGOs are cruel. Those who speak about respects for human dignity, even among prisoners, those who used to fight for human rights for everyone, those fighting to ban capital punishment, etc., what is this all about, after all? Now you can see how cruel all these senior people and the big intellectuals can be. I never thought that they can be this cruel. Their interviews shocked me. There we go, our very respectable senior figures who are our spiritual leaders, and even though they are very compassionate persons, but in certain moments, I could feel their cruelty. I try to come to terms with this. And my explanation is it does not matter how intellectual you are, but when your hearts are filled with vengeance, your wisdom disappears. But this does not always happen, not that often though.


But people often say those are the enlightened ones, but we are people who are starved of wisdom and are not shrewd enough to read the game.


It's impossible. It's a different set of explanations. I would be happy to hear their explanation. In the beginning, I also wondered and kept asking myself. Is there anything that I am not aware of which would be reasons that prevent the respectable ones from agreeing with me and standing with me? Why is their interpretation of the event totally different from mine? Is there anything more complicated that I cannot come to terms with? Are there any pieces of information that I lack? I try to review this all the time. I find nothing there. Nevertheless, it does not mean I do not understand the reasons that put them opposite me. I try my best to find the best explanation that helps me understand why they make such a stand. Luckily, Dr. Weng keeps reminding me to work with joy. But I have no idea if he is really joyful (laugh). In the beginning, he enjoyed it a lot, but I was very stressed. Later, he became very stressful, after changing from People's United Front Against Coup (PFAC) to UDD. The situation became very tense.



Many moons ago when I was studying for my B.A. in politics, I was forced to read the text, "Letter from a Birmingham Jail" by Martin Luther King Jr. I haven't read it since, but after reading the interview, it made me think about it again, and was inspired to re-read it.


Here is the link to the letter.


Money quote from MLK on breaking the law(abridged version):

You express a great deal of anxiety over our willingness to break laws. This is certainly a legitimate concern. Since we so diligently urge people to obey the Supreme Court's decision of 1954 outlawing segregation in the public schools, at first glance it may seem rather paradoxical for us consciously to break laws. One may won ask: "How can you advocate breaking some laws and obeying others?" The answer lies in the fact that there fire two types of laws: just and unjust. I would be the Brat to advocate obeying just laws. One has not only a legal but a moral responsibility to obey just laws. Conversely, one has a moral responsibility to disobey unjust laws. I would agree with St. Augustine that "an unjust law is no law at all"


Now, what is the difference between the two? How does one determine whether a law is just or unjust? A just law is a man-made code that squares with the moral law or the law of God. An unjust law is a code that is out of harmony with the moral law. To put it in the terms of St. Thomas Aquinas: An unjust law is a human law that is not rooted in eternal .law and natural law. Any law that uplifts human personality is just. Any law that degrades human personality is unjust.


Let us consider a more concrete example of just and unjust laws. An unjust law is a code that a numerical or power majority group compels a minority group to obey but does not make binding on itself. This is difference made legal. By the same token, a just law is a code that a majority compels a minority to follow and that it is willing to follow itself. This is sameness made legal.


Let me give another explanation. A law is unjust if it is inflicted on a minority that, as a result of being denied the right to vote, had no part in enacting or devising the law. Can any law enacted under such circumstances be considered democratically structured?


Sometimes a law is just on its face and unjust in its application. For instance, I have been arrested on a charge of parading without a permit. Now, there is nothing wrong in having an ordinance which requires a permit for a parade. But such an ordinance becomes unjust when it is used to maintain segregation and to deny citizens the First Amendment privilege of peaceful assembly and protest.


I understand that the condition of the Black Americans in the fifties in the US and the Thai condition in 2007 are not the same thing. However, I do think there are parts of the Birmingham Letter, as political theory, which do shed light on the Thai condition, especially regarding Khun Sombat's evident but polite disgust with the activities of progressive elements in Thailand who compromised their principles and accepted the illegality of the coup without protest in order to get Thaksin out.


Sunday, September 2, 2007

Prachatai: Open Letter to General Saprang

An Open Letter to Lieutenant General Saprang Kalayanamitr

Prachatai

31 August 2007

News

After Mr. Sombat Boon-ngam-anong, leader of an anti-coup group, was sued for libel by General Saprang Kalayanamitr, Deputy Commander in Chief, he had this open letter published in www.nocoup.org. Prachatai reprints it here.


An Open Letter to Lieutenant General Saprang Kalayanamitr


Dear Commander of Army Region 3,


The reason I address you as a Lieutenant General is because it is the actual rank you have earned honestly as an army officer. The titles, "General" and "Deputy Commander in Chief ", in my opinion, have been obtained illegitimately. You have obtained these ranks by abusing your power and after committing a severe breach of the constitution. Almost right after your complicity in the coup, you were bestowed with these titles by being promoted from Lieutenant General to General and appointed as Deputy Commander in Chief. They are the honours you received undeservedly after the coup. Therefore, I wish to address you simply as a Lieutenant General as the highest possible honour recognized by me and people in this country.


It is such an honour for an ordinary citizen like me to be a defendant in a libel suit initiated by you; the alleged slander of the "Hero of the Era". I shall not avoid confronting you in this legal wrangle. I shall represent myself in the court as I have many things to ask you during the hearing. I shall very much regret it if I miss the chance to ask you the questions myself.


I would like to ask you how my action can be deemed an insult to your human dignity? (The case stems from the mock darts game during the demonstration led by the anti-coup group in which the portrait of the ranking army officer was used as the target.) Do you have any idea why people like me dare to challenge your honour and dignity? The outrage we have shown towards you stems from the looting of sovereign power from the Thai people by you and your cronies. This includes the right to have a constitution that should be protected by law. But people who are upset by your action simply have no place to vent their frustration and rage since we have no state power, we have no tanks, we have no force, we have no "class". So people are not supposed to show their anger, but are simply allowed to hand flowers to the officers stationed at the tanks?


If dignity matters to you, I would like to ask you to also respect the human dignity of all Thai people as well. Will you also recognize equality under the law; will you recognize that sovereign power should lie with the people? They are supposed to have the rights to choose people to rule the country; choose their representatives to speak for them in the parliament. Can the military stop interfering with the police and the administration and refrain from suppressing dissenting voices among people?


Your dignity and mine must be recognized equally under a legitimate constitution.


I was arrested in Chiang Rai by your subordinates. Citing their power under martial law, they pulled me down from the truck roof when I was publicly criticizing the coup committed by the Council of National Security (CNS) and the draft constitution. This took place before the referendum. Your officers were dispatched directly from the Army Region 3 and they told me that they would treat me as a national traitor. They threatened to use the most severe possible legal action against me. They promised to investigate my past from the day I was born, and even my ancestors. I know that you have been well aware of the arrest throughout.


Do you know how kind the Chief of Intelligence Bureau of the Army Region 3 was to me (during my detention)? He told me that it was so easy for him to trick me. He could simply plant some illegal stuff on me, like drugs, while I was detained in the military barracks. Just that, and I could just end up languishing in jail for a long time. He told me he just did not want to do this. I am somewhat confused whether I should call his treatment toward me "generosity". Similarly, you have given an interview that you have "lifted death penalties for many people". And as for your phrase "to use machine guns to kill dogs at Sanam Luang", I would like to tell you as a human being who has lived my life around Sanam Luang (the main venue of the anti-coup demonstrations) for several months, your statement simply shows how much you are in thrall to power.


Between the oppressed and the arrogant rulers who are drunk with power, who is supposed to define the term "human dignity"? And if each group just interprets the term based on their own judgment, how different or similar will the definitions be?


Last but not least, I want to declare to you that I shall disobey state power that has been obtained illegitimately, particularly by the political military group, the CNS. I shall do my best to prevent the succession of power among the CNS members and shall challenge the martial law that has been declared since the 19 September 2006 coup. This is to reaffirm the dignity of Thai citizens which should be given a higher regard than the security touted by the CNS (which is not real national security anyway). Please do not withdraw your case against me. This is an important chance for us two to meet in the court.


In solidarity with democracy,


Sombat Boon-ngam-anong


The Citizens against Coup Group
31 August 2007