Group of Thai politicians plan overseas movement to resist coup | Reuters
Amy Sawitta Lefevre and Simon Webb,
(Reuters) - Around 15 Thai political leaders allied to the ousted government plan to establish a movement outside Thailand to lead a campaign of civil disobedience to military rule, two members of the group said on Thursday.
General Prayuth
Chan-ocha seized power on May 22 and has since led a crackdown that has
stifled dissent and silenced the "red shirt" supporters of former Prime
Minister Yingluck Shinawatra and her brother, billionaire former premier
Thaksin Shinawatra.
The
military has detained many politicians and activists and demanded as a
condition of release that they sign documents stating they would avoid
politics and halt anti-coup activities.
If
the plan proceeds, the group would represent the first attempt to mount
organized opposition to military rule. The two activists said they had
yet to formulate exactly what measures the group would use, but said
they would be peaceful and would aim to fill the leadership vacuum among
anti-coup elements.
"We believe democracy in Thailand
has been systematically destroyed," said former government minister and
red-shirt founding member Jakrapob Penkair in a telephone interview
from Phnom Penh, the capital of neighboring Cambodia.
"People
have been chastened, hunted and bullied with no sense of fairness,
justice or decency. We aim to create an organization for all groups
protesting the coup inside and outside Thailand. This would be a
non-radical group using civil disobedience."
Thaksin,
who lives in exile, is not involved in the movement, said both Jakrapob
and a second member of the group, fugitive former member of parliament
Sunai Julapongsathorn.
It
is unclear how much momentum the movement would gain among those opposed
to the junta without the backing of Thaksin, who revolutionized Thai
politics and commands the loyalty of millions in the populous north.
The
coup was the latest twist in nearly a decade of confrontation between
Thaksin and the Bangkok-based royalist establishment, which sees him as a
threat to their interests.
Thaksin
has given no guidance to his supporters since the military seized
power. The former prime minister has effectively funded and controlled
the red shirt movement from self-imposed exile since fleeing a 2008
conviction for abuse of power. He was ousted by the military in a
previous coup in 2006.
"We
will advance with or without him," said Jakrapob, a former spokesman
for Thaksin. "He's not involved and had no influence in setting this
up."
Jakrapob was forced
to resign as a minister in May 2008 after being accused of violating
Thailand's strict lese-majeste laws and has lived in Cambodia for some
time.
"RED SHIRT" LEADERS SUMMONED
The military has summoned Jakrapob along with other prominent red shirt leaders to report on June 9.
Asked
if the military had heard of the plans to set up such a movement
overseas, Winthai Suvaree, deputy spokesman for the military’s National
Council for Peace and Order, said: "Thai law can't touch those who flee
abroad but if we know where they are we will ask for international
cooperation to bring them back to Thailand."
"We
are monitoring groups resisting the coup. Those who were summoned and
do not show up will face the law and their case will be treated as
criminal. If they return to Thailand and have cases pending then these
may be brought to military court," he told a news conference.
Kuy Kuong, a spokesman at Cambodia's foreign ministry, said no request for such cooperation had yet been received from Thailand.
But
Kirth Chantharith, a deputy national police chief, told Reuters that
Cambodia's Prime Minister Hun Sen would not allow resistance groups to
base themselves in the country. "We won't allow anyone to use our
soil to plot against any country. Our position is clear," Kirth
Chantharith said. Sunai, the Thai activist, said some members of the
group would remain inside Thailand.
"We
will fight with information but the strategy is not yet clear," he told
Reuters in a conversation over Skype. Sunai said he was in Thailand,
but declined to say where. He is on the run after ignoring a military
summons in the days after the coup.
"In
three months, the military will have relaxed its grip. That is when we
will move. This won't be quick. It will take a long time."
Both Jakrapob and Sunai said the movement would be based in a neutral country outside Thailand. Both declined to say where.
The group would not base themselves in Cambodia to avoid putting in a difficult position, Jakrapob said.
The
group may call itself the "Free Thai Movement", adopting the name of
the underground resistance in Thailand to Japanese occupation during
World War Two, Jakrapob said. Sunai said no name had been chosen yet.
The group had considered and then ruled out the possibility of forming a government in exile, Jakrapob said.
The
junta has banned meetings of more than five people and at the weekend
flooded Bangkok with thousands of troops and policemen. Opposition to
the coup has been limited to small flash mob protests, and they have for
the most part been peaceful.
Some
protesters have expressed defiance through the use of a three-fingered
salute inspired by the hit film "The Hunger Games", where the gesture
symbolized rebellion against a totalitarian regime.
Others
Bangkok protesters have sat in groups of less than five reading books
about civil disobedience or that criticize authoritarian government,
such as George Orwell's "1984".
(Additional reporting by Pracha Hariraksapitak in BANGKOK and Prak Chan Thul in PHNOM PENH; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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