FROM ANDREW DRUMMOND
Bangkok, May 19 2010
Link to Andrew Drummond on RTE Evening News
And a much better article by me old mate Bill Barnes
with some good research on the burnings
Angry anti-government demonstrators, claiming to be fighting for democracy and for the poor against Thailand’s elite, set fire to Bangkok yesterday burning down banks, shopping malls, and small shops.
After their leaders surrendered to Thai Army troops furious members of the United Front for Democracy over Dictatorship went on a looting and fiery rampage throughout the city and in upcountry Thailand.
Last night hundreds of tourists were reported to be stranded in the Thai capital unable to get to the airport for their flights home after the government announced a curfew from 8 pm to 6am for Bangkok and 22 other provinces were put under curfew.
Death toll rises
The day’s death toll rose to 12 after six bodies were found inside the grounds of Pathumwanram Temple in the centre of the former ‘exclusion zone’ after a firefight which lasted well into the late hours.
The temple was a place not only where women and children were sheltering but also where red shirt die hards decided to make a last stand.
Earlier black smoke washed over the Bangkok skyline after furious red shirts also burned down Central World, a show piece department store and conference complex, the second largest in South East Asia, and set fire to the country’s Channel 3 Radio. By nightfall some 20 other buildings were ablaze.

Central World on fire. Snipers are alleged to have halted fire trucks
But their mentor Thaksin Shinawatra, the ousted Prime Minister, who predicated guerrilla warfare if the troops used force, may not have been amused.
Red shirts target ‘wrong elite’
Channel 3 is owned by the wealthy Maleenont Thai Chinese family. Pracha Maleenont was Thaksin Shinawatra’s Minister for Sport and Tourism before Shinawatra was ousted in a military coup.
The Central Group, which owns the now destroyed Central World, is owned by the Chirathavit Thai Chinese family which also has controlling shares of the Bangkok Post .

Kasikorn Bank burning/ thapanee3miti
When Thaksin was in power he had the editor of the Bangkok Post fired, through director Samrit Chirathavit, after he wrote an editorial telling the Prime Minister not to be so ‘arrogant’.
Although Thaksin Shinawatra yesterday denied he had control of the UDD, he has admitted many times that they took his advice. The Government has also accused him of funding the protests. More specifically they say he vetoed a proposed ‘road map’ and has been funding the demonstrations.
Guerrila warfare
Yesterday Thaksin said: “A military crackdown can spread resentment and these resentful people will become guerrillas.”
No sooner had he said it that his prophecy appeared to be fulfilled. Red shirts set fire to the Stock Exchange of Thailand, Central World, Siam Cinema, the Office of the Narcotics Control Board and several banks and late yesterday some 23 buildings were reported to have been torched.
The Thai Criminal Court issued a warrant for Thaksin Shinawatra on terrorism charges but later withdrew it, seeking further information to back the charge.
Protesters also looted shops and attacked ATM machines with crowbars. But with no leaders there appeared to be no reason to their madness.
There were also widespread reports of the targeting of journalists, who the redshirts blame for their defeat. The Editor of the Nation newspaper has been urgently tweeting to journalists : “Take off your green press armbands now!”.
In the district of Samrong British schoolteacher Richard Barrow said: “Every time the TV showed pictures of burning buildings the red-shirts cheered. The biggest cheer was for the Channel 3 building on fire. This is not the Thailand I have loved for 16 years.”
In Siam Square, Bangkok’s equivalent of Covent Garden, a theatre was burned down. Shops there as at Central World were also reported to have been looted.
As the government announced a curfew stores throughout the city started shutting up and there was a mad rush on supermarkets and petrol stations.
Similar incidents were reported up country with the provincial hall in Udon Thani, a redshirt stronghold near the Laos border, taken over by the redshirts and burned down and violent protests reported also in Khon Kaen in north east Thailand and in Samut Prakan and Sri Racha in the central belt.
Tens of thousands of tourists in the resort of Pattaya were confined to their hotels as all the bars and clubs shut.
Sharpened bamboo smashed into tooth picks
The day’s furiously paced events started at 4 am when there were scenes of chaos in the camp of the anti-government protesters when at first fires were doused with water cannon and then the Thai army sent in Chinese made Type 85 AFV armoured personnel carriers. The vehicles made toothpicks out of the sharpened bamboo poles in the barricades.
Then troops slowly but methodically picked their way through towards the centre of the protest camp, taking time to secure hand grenades hanging within the barricades and defusing suspected bombs.
Around 1.15 pm, red-shirt leader Jatuporn Promphan had appeared on the rally stage making a passionate plea for the red shirts to end protesting at Rajprasong to avoid further loss of life.

Vandergrift - a tragic irony
“Please understand and I know you all know I will never abandon you, but it is now time to avoid more lives lost, because it is our redshirts who got killed.”
Some six are thought have been killed with scores of others injured in the initial assault. The scene of the bloodiest action in the last few minutes before the surrender was near Sarasin Road, Bangkok, about five hundred yards from the Red HQ.
Among the dead was Fabio Polenghi, an Italian photographer who was shot in the stomach and who died before he could reach hospital. A second, a Canadian, Chandler Vandergrift who felt the full force of a grenade together with two soldiers, is believed to be critically injured.

Soldier injured by the same M79 grenade as Chandler Vandergrift
Vandergrift, 42 , also a part time ngo, ‘film-maker’, and apparent expert on ‘risk assessment’ was a red-shirt supporter and in his last blog ‘Weapons of the weak’ he asked if Red shirts had weapons why there were no pictures of them. He described Abhisit Vejjajiva as a failed Prime Minister and Panitan Wattanayakorn as a ‘former academic turned shameless government mouthpiece’.
Ironically Vandergrift, who also wrote stories together with Canadian Nelson Rand, who was shot by troops earlier in the week, took the full blast from a red-shirt M79 rifle grenade.
Bangkok based British photographer Andrew Chant, from Yeovil, who was nearby said: “We came under attack from M79 grenades. The first one exploded in front of me. I was stunned but I think a tree and roadside concrete must have sent the shrapnel the other way.
“Another one a hundred yards away took down a solder and the Canadian. The Canadian was moaning a lot. There was a lot of blood”.
Meanwhile some 20 protesters dressed in black, possibly members of the mysterious ‘Men in Black’, who the military claimed have been shooting back, were seized and detained in the Kian Kwuan building nearby, which houses the European Commission’s local office.
Shortly after 2 pm with the surrender of the leaders government spokesman Panitan Wattanayakorn announced that the government was back under control
The operation was inevitable after the Thai Government said yesterday it would no longer negotiate the with red-shirted demonstrators, who are in the main supporters of ousted Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra’, better known in Britain as the man who made a killing on Manchester City Football Club.
An angry Thaksin distanced himself from the violence yesterday” I am man of peace. I have never supported violence”.
Last night the city was in the control of the police and army. All television stations played ‘Auld Lang Syne’ prior to government announcements.
Panitan Wattanayakorn said: “People caught out after the curfew should have their ID or their passports. But please stay at home. We apologise. We are so sorry. What we have seen is not the nature of the Thai people. We are gentle people. It seems that journalists, in particular foreign journalists, have been targeted. We do not know why. We are trying to find out, and we are putting things back in order.
*Of course in the politics of the elite in Thailand nothing is set in stone and often the elite just give their allegiance to the Prime Minister of the day, and or the ‘winning side’.
Thank you for telling it like it is. Thank god the reds have gone home. They were not wanted here in BKK.
(Thai Government said yesterday it would no longer negotiate the with red-shirted demonstrators) Spoken like a true Dictator!
I fear this is but a fore taste of much worse to come when the inevitable occurs with you knows who. Then it will hit the fan when the army fractures which I believe is only held together by a crumbling and aging clue.
RIP THAILAND
Own goal by Thaksin to be sure but then he wasn’t, and isn’t, the world’s greatest strategist. Good story and all helps to clue in the ingenue.
Minor point and probably more telling of the time you have spent in Thailand, but most would find the photo a tad obscene and intrusive in the poor soldier’s sufffering. Perhaps too much time with the Pattaya chronicler’s digest has altered your perspective but most new to the reality of how the Thai cover events might find it quite upsetting.
Andrew
I am not sure if your are entirely correct in the statements about the Maleenont family. I think you will find that one brother - a former minister in the Thaksin Government - allegedly supports Thaksin whilst another brother - owner of Channel 3 - allegedly supports the current Government. But as you say nothing is set in stone.
Andrew Drummond Yes I can never be sure where allegiances lie here or if they were still the same as before. My point was that perhaps with the exception of Bangkok Bank attacks were indiscriminate.
Are any of these properties owned by King Power?
Where is Sunil “Tony” Rathnayaka when you need him?
The reds may not be wanted in Bangkok,but there exit strategy was a work of pure genious, fight hard for 3 days goad the enemy into thinking you will die for the cause ,hold out till the last minute,tie up emergency services,exit fast and in small motorised groups,wreak mayhem,and fade away.
The massive damage and the relativly small loss of life done on the cost of some petrol is the factor that will mean the most if any changes are to take place.
For the scary thing is a small number of rag tag militants have proven that in Bangkok they can come back at any time and wreck havoc.
Andrew Drummond ‘Always look on the bright side of life..tee tum’
Thank you for your objective analyses on the on-going political turmoil in Thailand. You are very informed on the subject (the big picture and all the parities involved). Your analyses are far more credible than any reports by the American or British international news network; many Thais have been extremely disappointed by how one-sided their reports have been. I personally think that these news networks have hidden political agendas.
I live in downtown Bangkok, just down the street from the Red’s main rally site, and had to relocate to the east side of the city after the Reds started throwing bombs in public areas. I think Thaksin is definitely cooking up his next plan. He’s not the type that gives up easily until he has things his way. I’m not a person who blindly support anyone or any side without doing my own analysis. But I think the fact that Thaksin has to hire a publicist or lobbyist tells me that he’s putting on a show, telling the world to see what he would like them to see. And sadly, many seem to enjoy watching his shows.
“In Siam Square, Bangkok’s equivalent of Covent Garden”
That’s a bit of a stretch!