Ex-PM Thaksin a saintly figure in rural Thailand | Asian Correspondent
AP News Dec 06, 2013
KAMBON, Thailand (AP) — Here, in a village where electricity is still
a novelty, they’ll quickly tell you who was responsible for bringing
change to this long-neglected corner of Thailand.
Thaksin Shinawatra is a former prime minister, a billionaire
businessman and the brother of the current prime minister. He has lived
for years in luxurious, self-imposed exile in Dubai, but is still widely
seen as Thailand’s most powerful politician. He is despised by his
opponents among Thailand’s traditional elite, who disdain him as a
corrupt leader who spent billions of the government’s dollars to amass a
huge following among the poor and uneducated.
But around here he is a saint.
“Ten years ago, the road you drove on to get here was dirt. There was
no electricity, there was no irrigation,” said Pichai Poltaklang, a
retired primary schoolteacher and local organizer for Thaksin’s
political movement, commonly known as the “Red Shirts.” He ticks off
government programs: the virtually free health care, the low-cost
education loans, the old-age pension. “Before Thaksin came to power we
were left out.”
As Thailand faces an immense social and political divide, a schism
pitting the rural poor against a traditional urban elite that has again
ignited bloody protests in the streets of Bangkok, places like Kambon
are at the heart of Thaksin’s power.
There are tens of thousands of villages like this scattered across
Thailand’s north and northeast, and millions of villagers who Thaksin
can call upon if the scattered protests of recent weeks descend into
full-scale street violence and his sister’s government is threatened.
If no one here is calling for bloodshed, a quiet threat is always implicit. Occasionally, it’s explicit.
“Across the northeast we can seize every government office in every
town, in every city, in every province,” said Thongplean Boonphunga, a
middle-aged rice farmer. The elite may deride Thaksin’s followers as
uneducated bumpkins, but, she notes, the country people have numbers on
their side.
“They can’t control the whole country. We can,” he said.
Kambon is in Thailand’s northeast, a sprawling, populous region of
rice paddies and small farms that was long ignored by successive
governments in Bangkok. As Thailand’s economy boomed, and the country
became one of Southeast Asia’s financial powerhouses, millions of
farmers struggled in villages that had barely changed since the days of
their grandparents.
But that changed under Thaksin, who was born in the north, and who
used millions made as a telecommunications magnate to vault himself into
politics. He became prime minister in 2001.
To his rural followers, Thaksin is a man who understands their plight and looked for ways to improve their lives.
To his many critics, he took a cold look at Thailand’s demographics,
focusing on populous but poor regions where he knew government spending
would make an immediate impact and bring followers.
The followers came in droves.
“The Thaksin government gave them concrete moments in their lives”
where they saw real change, said David Streckfuss, an American scholar
based in Thailand. “They also realized their power” in electing him over
and over, he said.
Thaksin quickly became Thailand’s most popular politician, with that
popularity holding on tightly after he was ousted in a 2006 military
coup, and then after he went into exile to avoid a corruption conviction
he says was politically motivated. He has not been back to Thailand
since 2008.
The 2006 coup split Thailand’s social divisions wide open, and set
the stage for years of on-and-off political turmoil. Since then,
elections have been interspersed with carefully orchestrated chaos,
weather by Thaksin’s “Red Shirts” or by the “Yellow Shirts” of the
traditional elite.
The most recent trouble began in November, when the ruling party —
led by Thaksin’s younger sister, Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra —
tried to push an amnesty bill through Parliament. Critics said it was
designed to allow Thaksin back into Thailand.
Even though the government backed down on the amnesty bill,
protesters flooded into government buildings, trying to force the
collapse of Yingluck’s government. The protesters, led by former Deputy
Prime Minister Suthep Thaugsuban, say Thaksin voters are easily swayed
by his populist policies, and they are demanding the creation of an
unelected “people’s council” to administer the country.
The political standoff resulted in three days of intense clashes
between protesters and police. But the clashes abruptly ended Tuesday
and both both sides called an informal truce to celebrate the revered
king’s 86th birthday on Thursday.
While he used his annual birthday speech to call for stability, King
Bhumibol Adulyadej made no direct comments on the political crisis.
In Kambon, like everywhere else in Thailand, they’re waiting to see
what will happen Friday, when the enforced unity of the royal birthday
is over and politics will again rule. The autumn harvest is underway,
and in the fields the air is sweet with the smell of freshly cut rice
stalks.
No one here is eager for protests now, when there is so much work to
do — major Red Shirt protests tend to coincide with the spring hot
season, when farmers have more free time — but protest leader Suthep
Thaugsuban has vowed that “our battle” will resume on Friday.
So they are closely watching what is happening in Bangkok.
Noothuan Wongthong, a 52-year-old farmer with a lilting voice and
wool gloves to protect her hands from the dried rice stalks she hacked
with a hand-made sickle, was working for a neighbor on a recent morning.
Like her neighbors, she can quickly list programs that have benefited
her: the guaranteed price for rice, the loans, the medical care that
has paid for repeated blood tests after she began to grow strangely
tired. She worries what will happen if protesters drive Yingluck from
power.
She’s got a new Yamaha scooter, and a 27-inch TV. She gets more money
when she sells her own rice, and is paid more when she works for other
farmers. She doesn’t want to lose her grip on the lower rungs of
Thailand’s middle-class life.
“Before Thaksin, the money never reached us here,” she said. “Now it does.”
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