Thailand fears for future after coup

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BANGKOK — The last time Thailand’s army seized power, in 2006, some called it “the smiling coup.”

BANGKOK — The last time Thailand’s army seized power, in 2006, some called it “the smiling coup.”

Residents of Bangkok who supported the overthrow of an elected government they accused of corruption poured into the streets, handing out flowers to soldiers who had deployed tanks across this metropolis of glass skyscrapers and ornate Buddhist temples.

It was bloodless, and for a time, it was calm.

Last Thursday, Thailand’s army seized power again without firing a shot, overthrowing a popularly elected administration that won a landslide vote three years earlier. The army says it had to act to restore order after seven months of increasingly violent political turbulence. But the aftermath feels much different this time.

Most of the country’s ousted government has been detained or is in hiding. Journalists, scholars and politicians are being ordered to surrender at army bases. Activists have fled. The junta chief has issued ominous warnings not to criticize the takeover. A nighttime curfew has been imposed. And protests, though small, have come almost immediately.

Hanging over it all is the threat of serious resistance. The political movements spawned in the aftermath of the 2006 coup — particularly the “Red Shirts” who support the ousted government — had vowed to take action if there was another.

So far, there has been no bloodshed. But as ousted Education Minister Chaturon Chaisang put it Tuesday, shortly before being taken into custody by soldiers at a news conference in Bangkok, “If anyone thinks that the coup will stop all the conflict and the turmoil or violence, they would be wrong.”

The May 22 putsch led by Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha “will create more conflict,” said Chaturon, the only member of the deposed government who has spoken freely in public since the military took over. “From now on, there will be more and more resistance,” he said, adding that if violence erupts, “it will be a disaster for this country.”

The junta is trying to silence the critics it has detained by releasing them only if they sign a form agreeing not to do anything “provocative.” Violators face two years in jail.

Thai news outlets have been shut down or are practicing self-censorship. The military has said it will crack down on online speech it considers inflammatory. It denied responsibility for a brief and partial shutdown of Facebook in Thailand on Wednesday, but it has begun targeting websites deemed threatening. Among those now blocked: the Thailand page of Human Rights Watch.

This coup is in essence a continuation of the last one. Both were sparked by political conflict surrounding former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra.

Thaksin, a billionaire who made a fortune in the telecommunications industry, shook up the country’s traditional power structure by winning over the majority lower classes with populist policies that brought virtually free health care and electricity to some villages for the first time. His opponents, including powerful businessmen, staunch royalists and much of the upper and middle classes, accused him of corruption, abuse of power and disrespect for the nation’s revered king.

He was deposed in 2006, and two years later was convicted on corruption charges he says were politically motivated. He lives abroad to avoid serving prison time but had remained deeply influential in the recently ousted government, which was led by his sister until a court removed her from office earlier this month.

The latest coup was the culmination of a half-year of protests triggered by a disastrous attempt by the ruling party to pass an amnesty bill that would have erased Thaksin’s two-year prison sentence and allowed him to return home.

In the days immediately following the 2006 coup, only a few ministers were detained, and critics and perceived opponents were not summoned daily, as they are now — more than 250 so far. Public TV stations were censored briefly, but social media was in its infancy and the partisan TV stations that have backed rival sides in recent years — shut last week by the new junta — did not exist.

And back then, there were no immediate street protests. This time, demonstrators have come out daily — albeit small groups mostly numbering in the hundreds.

On Sunday, about 1,500 people marched several miles through the heart of the capital, defying a ban on political gatherings. There have been scuffles, and some have been detained, but so far the army has not used force to disperse protesters — perhaps aware the situation could rapidly deteriorate.

“I kept quiet for a long time, but I have come out now because I got upset with what’s going on,” said Parthittagon Wanithkungwan, an English teacher. “We have to teach these people a lesson, that such a thing should never be tolerated in a democratic society.”

Although Bangkok is considered an establishment stronghold, it is not entirely so. As demonstrators walked across the city, girls in karaoke bars came out to give a thumbs-up. Vendors smiled and made V signs for victory. Some clapped. Taxis drove past, their occupants leaning out the window to display hastily made “wanted” posters on sheets of white paper bearing the image of Prayuth, the army ruler.

The country has endured a dozen successful coups since the end of absolute monarchy in 1932, and even when democratic governments were at the helm, there was never any doubt that real power remained with the military.

The army-backed establishment insists its goal is to root out corruption and abuse of power it says emanates from Thaksin, his family and his allies. It is now demanding political reform before elections, saying Thaksin and his supporters would use corruption and vote-buying to win.

But it has been vague about how it intends to improve the system.

The army-backed establishment pushed through a new constitution in 2007 drafted in part to curb Thaksin’s power, but it has still not managed to win an election. Controversial judicial rulings removed two pro-Thaksin prime ministers in 2008, one of whom was forced to work out of the VIP lounge of the capital’s old airport because protesters had taken over his office.

The opposition Democrat Party eventually took over, sparking protests in 2010 that saw downtown Bangkok occupied by the pro-Thaksin “Red Shirt” movement. Those protests ended with a bloody military crackdown that left more than 90 people dead and the city in flames.

This time, the Red Shirts had vowed to respond if the government was toppled again, but many of its leaders have been detained. Some have been freed, but only on condition that they do not participate in political activity that could incite division; the junta is threatening to prosecute and jail those who do.

That is why nobody has heard from Thaksin’s sister Yingluck Shinawatra, who was forced to step down as prime minister this month after a controversial court ruling, since she was released from military custody this week.

Yingluck’s administration, which ascended to power after 2011 vote, had been hamstrung by an inability to use force against protesters even as they took over government buildings and key parts of Bangkok, for fear of triggering an army intervention. The army had warned the government its leadership would be responsible for any loss of life.

Now that the military is in charge, its policy toward dissent — and perceived dissent — is much different. Two Thai reporters who asked Prayuth about elections and appointing a prime minister were summoned by the army a day later for asking “inappropriate” questions in an “aggressive, pushy manner.”

A week into the takeover, it is hard to know how many people oppose it, but the initial anger is more palpable than it was eight years ago.

“This is not just about the coup,” said Pimlapat Suksawat, a health care worker who marched this weekend. “This is about us. Our society is not what it used to be. It’s changing. The lower class is now the middle class. We are educated, we are no longer poor, but still they look down on us.”

Pimlapat said that “fewer people are smiling this time … and if we don’t come out to stop them, they’ll do it again.”

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Todd Pitman, AP’s Bangkok chief of bureau since 2011, also covered Thailand’s last coup in 2006.