Thursday, 11 December 2008

PAD...PPP...too many acronyms, not enough information

I have to admit that before coming to Thailand, I knew very little about the country except that I have a lot of friends who have spent many a drunken week here diving, sunbathing, and all in all 'chilling out.' 

I also don't remember the last time I ever saw Thailand in the international news headlines. 

My how things have changed.

I've learned that Thailand isn't just a drunken beach party, and I've managed to arrive in this country just in time for it to splash its name all over the English papers paired with words like 'crisis' and 'attack.' Words I don't like to hear any more than the next guy. 

So for my readers who are just as naive to the situation here as I was just a short time ago, here's the deal:

For a few months there was a large group of anti-government protesters (the PAD, or People's Alliance for Democracy...the most ironic title they could find; will explain later, or read here for more details) on the streets, surrounding government buildings, and for a few days sitting in Bangkok's two major airports, suspending all air traffic in and out of the country's capital. Basically they wanted the Prime Minister to resign because they believe him to be corrupt (which it appears is probably true). 

The airport sit-in caused enormous disruptions to Thailand's economy as you can imagine, so the protesters definitely made their point. Check out the link for more on that, but the short version is that during Thailand's busiest tourist season (now) hotels are at a fraction of their usual capacity. Not to mention all the exports Thailand produces that couldn't fly out last week. One foreigner managed to get inside the airport and camp out with the PAD. He video taped a bunch of what he saw which you can see here.

So last week when the PAD made it clear that they in fact were quite comfortable in the airport, but thanks for asking, the leaders of the ruling party were found guilty of electoral fraud and the Prime Minister plus his executives were banned from government for five years. Ouch. Party in the airport!! 

So now everyone is sitting around and playing the waiting game. They will probably hold elections in the next couple of weeks which could be pretty interesting and could very probably make things worse regardless of the turn out. Here's why. 

The PAD is not a party for the people, nor are they democratic. So great title right? PAD members are royalists, consisting of middle/upper class citizens who believe in an appointment based government led by the royal family. So no popular elections, no democracy, the term fascist-like has been thrown around...

The PAD managed to lead a government coup a couple of years ago throwing out the previous Prime Minister, Thaksin. Only problem is, when a popular election was held after that coup, Thaksin's ally was appointed Prime Minister, because despite their ability to make a whole lot of noise, the PAD do not make up the majority of the population here. 
Do you see the problem yet?

So now here we are again, probably about to have another election. And guess what? The PAD still don't make up most of the population. The PPP (pro-government) members consist mostly of rural farmers which is a huge majority of Thailand's population. So post-election, either the PAD wins (not likely) and the majority finally get pissed off enough to do something about it, or the PPP supporters win and we've all seen what kind of mess the PAD can drum up. 

So there's the deal on Thailand. Don't you feel smarter? Now go impress someone with your knowledge and feel free to correct the mistakes I probably made. 

12 comments:

Anonymous said...

Wow!@#@! So much stuff! Excellent post ... and what is even better, we don't have to fill in a HUGE form to comment! Progress

Anonymous said...

So who do we prefer? Corrupt elite ... or corrupt everyone else????

Anonymous said...

PPP ... PAD ... Why do we care? OK I care. It is a beautiful country with beautiful people, but it seems incapable of getting their shit together. What can the rest of the world do except watch?

Anonymous said...

check this out. http://www.reuters.com/article/rbssFinancialServicesAndRealEstateNews/idUSBKK1387420081211

Anonymous said...

Thanks for the well thought out comment. You are obviously well qualified on this subject. please share more of your wsidom.

Anonymous said...

*wisdom

Anonymous said...

Wow - Marianne - you have created an argument in your comments! Well done for opening up a discussion on something that I previously had no knowledge about whatsoever! :) :) :)

Anonymous said...

Pretty informative article here: http://www.economist.com/world/asia/displaystory.cfm?story_id=12724800&source=most_commented

LTrav said...

umm, in all honesty, this clarifies more than anything else i've read. and i live here. cheers, brit. you're not as dumb as you look ;)

miss you!

MIA said...

Thanks for the comments everyone, but Zed666 and NotZed666 leave the bickering for someone else's blog! The other links posted here are pretty cool, I suggest checking them out!

Anonymous said...

So Nims ... you are all over this blog. What do you think about all of this? And you too Marianne in Asia (too long btw). Is the new guy for real? Can you even talk about this?

Very cool blog altogether Marianne In Asia (MIA if that's OK?)

MIA said...

Sam8877, I have a lot of mixed feelings about the new guy. He represents a party I for the most part don't really agree with, but if you look up his stated policies he actually seems to contradict a lot of what I understood the PAD to stand for, in a good way. He claims to support a lot of policies to help out the entire population, including a move to free health care for instance. I will try to write a blog about this soon.