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Thailand court acquits 24 Red Shirt leaders over 2010 protests

15-8-2019 < Blacklisted News 12 658 words
 

A court in Thailand has dismissed terrorism charges against 24 leaders of an extended street protest in 2010 that saw key areas of central Bangkok closed off and engulfed in violence.


The Bangkok Criminal Court ruled on Wednesday that the two-month protest by the Red Shirt supporters of former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, during which 91 people were killed and thousands were hurt, was "a political fight, not terrorism". The defendants were acquitted of all charges.


The case was brought by state prosecutors and more than 40 business owners affected by the Red Shirts' seizure of Bangkok's central shopping and business district.


The case involved charges of terrorism, criminal association, using force to damage government property, inciting unrest, possession of arms, obstruction of officials through intimidation and the gathering of more than 10 people to cause chaos.


The casualties included soldiers as well as protesters.


Unidentified armed men in black, whose weapons included grenade launchers, acted as a mysterious armed auxiliary to the protesters, but it appeared that most of the dead were unarmed civilians.


Years of conflict


Thaksin was overthrown in a military coup in 2006 after being accused of corruption and abuse of power. His allies won a 2007 election, but parliamentary manoeuvering installed the rival Democrat Party in power in 2008, inspiring the 2010 protest that called for Democrat Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva to step down.


Thaksin's removal set off years of sometimes violent conflict between his supporters and opponents, who engaged in aggressive street protests against governments led by the other's faction.


During three months of street protests in 2008, Thaksin's foes - known as the Yellow Shirts - occupied the prime minister's offices, as well as Bangkok's international airport for about a week.


In July, the criminal court dismissed charges of insurrection against four key members of an anti-Thaksin group, the People's Democratic Reform Committee.


The group organised large, aggressive street protests in late 2013 that a government led by Thaksin's sister, Yingluck Shinawatra, could not control.


It led to widespread chaos and served as a reason for the military to stage a 2014 takeover.


An election in March this year brought a pro-military party to power.


The US is involved in regime change worldwide – from Venezuela in South America, to Ukraine in Eastern Europe, to Syria in the Middle East, to Afghanistan in Central Asia. But these headline-grabbing wars, coups, color revolutions, and interventions are far from the full extend of US interference. The US is also engaged in regime change efforts all along China’s peripheries. This includes across Southeast Asia and in particular, the nation of Thailand.

Western regime change efforts have intensified ahead of upcoming elections in Thailand. Opposition groups attempting to take power and remove Thailand’s powerful, independent military from Thai politics have received extensive, well-documented funding and political support from Washington, London, Brussels, and Western corporate foundations, including the most notorious of all – George Soros’ Open Society Foundation (OSF).

As the United States intensifies its accusations against Russia for alleged interference in the 2016 US Presidential Elections, the United States itself is found engaged in confirmed political interference worldwide. This includes in Southeast Asia where Washington is attempting to rush elections in Thailand in hopes of returning their proxy Thaksin Shinawatra and his Pheu Thai Party (PTP) to power.


In a desperate attempt to keep the ousted US-backed regime of Thaksin Shinawatra alive, TIME Magazine, along with many others, is promoting a narrative of violent "civil war" emanating from Shinawatra's "red shirts" who have fled to Cambodia and are "regrouping" there.


Life goes on as normal in Thailand's capital of Bangkok the day after the Royal Thai Army declared it was taking power from the diminished, ineffectual "caretaker government" Thursday. Businesses and offices were open as usual on Friday with no discernible difference for Thais. TV programming is expected to be returned to normal today as well.

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