Results 1 to 11 of 11
  1. #1
    loob lor geezer
    Bangyai's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2009
    Last Online
    02-05-2019 @ 08:05 AM
    Location
    The land of silk and money.
    Posts
    5,984

    NCPO Says It Doesn’t Like the Word “Coup

    NCPO Says It Doesn’t Like the Word “Coup”

    BANGKOK —

    In an ongoing effort to soften the public perception of its military takeover on 22 May, the Thai military junta has announced it does not like the word “coup.”

    “I try not to use the word coup, because I feel that what we are doing at the moment is quite different, completely different than what happened in the past,” a spokesperson for the junta’s National Council for Peace and Order (NCPO) told an audience at Thailand’s Foreign Correspondent’s Club in Bangkok last night.
    Col. Werachon Sukondhapatipak said he preferred to use the phrase “military intervention.”
    Since becoming a constitutional democracy in 1932, Thailand has experienced 22 coup attempts, 13 of which were successful. The Thai army staged its most recent putsch last month and has since announced plans to govern the country until October, after which it will appoint an interim government to carry out national reforms. The junta says elections will not be held for at least another 15 months, and only if “conditions are stable.”
    There is wide agreement that this military takeover is different than the most recent coup in 2006 — but not because it is less “coup-like” as Col. Werachon suggested.
    Rather, many experts haveobserved that this military takeover is different because the junta is exercising its authoritarian powers more harshly and extensively than in any coup in Thailand's recent past.
    “This is worse than previous coups,” a political science lecturer at university in Bangkok told Khaosod English. “Because in [1991 and 2006], the military held onto power for a short time and then they organized a technocrat government to take care of all these economic issues for them. The NCPO on the other hand, their actions look more like the military regimes of the 1950s and 1960s."
    The NCPO says it plans to maintain control of the country’s administration until October, which is the longest any junta has held onto power since 1971. The coupmakers say it was necessary to seize power in order to resolve the political conflict that led to paralysing street protests and sporadic violence between Thailand's rival political factions over the past six months.
    Over the past few weeks, the junta has banned all forms of peaceful political expression, raided homes without search warrants, censored the media, and summoned and detained hundreds of politicians and activists, all under the banner of "returning happiness to the Thai people."
    Last night, the NCPO spokesperson said he doesn't like the word "detention” either.
    “I don’t like the word detention,” Col. Werachon said, “Because the conditions that happen are quite different.”
    He went on to list the amenities provided to detainees, which include “air conditioning,” “good food,” and “all kinds of activities that make the time pass quickly.”
    “Is this detention?” Col. Werachon asked.
    Col. Werachon said the army bars detainees from having any contact with the outside world in order to provide them with a “cooling-off period." This is a necessary part of the junta’s goal to reconcile the country’s political divisions and “return happiness" to the people, he said.
    “We talk to them, we try to convince them to put the country’s interests before their own,” Col. Werachon said. “We don’t want them to have information from the outside. We just want them to be on their own.”
    Many of those who have been released from military custody have confirmed that they were treated well, aside from being aggressively interrogated and subjected to various forms of “psychological warfare.”
    However, those who do not report to the military soon after receiving a summons order can face up to two years in prison. A well-known Redshirt leader and anti-coup activist, Sombat Boonngamanong, is expected to face trial in martial court for defying a summons order and organising anti-coup protests on social media. Col. Werachon said he does not consider Mr. Sombat to be a "political prisoner."
    The military has released the majority of its detainees within seven days, which is the upper limit under martial law. However, Human Rights Watch has identified one casein which a Redshirt activist has been held in an undisclosed location for more than two weeks.
    Col. Werachon said that no more than 15 people are currently being held by the military.
    “We ask people to refrain from expressing any political views because we believe that this is not the time,” said Col. Werachon. “We are trying to adjust the mood and tone of society.”

    NCPO Says It Doesn?t Like the Word ?Coup?

  2. #2
    loob lor geezer
    Bangyai's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2009
    Last Online
    02-05-2019 @ 08:05 AM
    Location
    The land of silk and money.
    Posts
    5,984
    Quote Originally Posted by Bangyai View Post

    He went on to list the amenities provided to detainees, which include “air conditioning,” “good food,” and “all kinds of activities that make the time pass quickly.”

    “Is this detention?” Col. Werachon asked ?
    No.

    I seem to remember real detention is staying after school for an hour and standing outside the headmasters office.


  3. #3
    Thailand Expat
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Last Online
    @
    Posts
    38,456
    They probably like people defining the difference between 'Judicial' Coup and Coup D'etat even less.

    Still. it could be worse- just consider their loathing for blank A4 paper, boy scout salutes, and Facebook likes.

  4. #4
    Thailand Expat
    Humbert's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2009
    Last Online
    08-01-2024 @ 01:10 AM
    Location
    Bangkok
    Posts
    12,572
    This regime has a very narrow world view and is now trying to redefine language in order to control the thinking of the masses. Most Thais will go along without even recognizing how they are being manipulated.

  5. #5
    R.I.P
    Mr Lick's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2009
    Last Online
    25-09-2014 @ 02:50 PM
    Location
    Mountain view
    Posts
    40,028
    I suppose it would seem less provocative than the 'War on Drugs' slogan around a decade ago when 3000 citizens were slaughtered at the whim of those with a badge, some merely with personal vendatta's.

    The west also seem to use similar language to justify their needs. WMD anyone?

  6. #6
    Lord of Swine
    Necron99's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2012
    Last Online
    @
    Location
    Nahkon Sawon
    Posts
    13,021
    ^ Police Action? Detainee? Rendition? Enemy Combatant?

    Anyways, it's not a Coup, they are quite right.
    It's a Temporary Military Administration with the King as Head of State.
    He signed a paper saying so.

  7. #7
    Thailand Expat
    Humbert's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2009
    Last Online
    08-01-2024 @ 01:10 AM
    Location
    Bangkok
    Posts
    12,572
    ^^So you agree, it's not a coup?

  8. #8
    Thailand Expat
    spliff's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Last Online
    23-01-2024 @ 08:31 AM
    Location
    Upper N.East
    Posts
    2,081
    I thought they were providing it for Thai viewers free of charge.

  9. #9
    I'm in Jail
    Butterfly's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2006
    Last Online
    12-06-2021 @ 11:13 PM
    Posts
    39,832
    quite comical but at the same time, they have a point. It's really a takeover for what's about to happen next.

    coup, takeover, putch etc... doesn't really matter what the word is, it's the reason behind them that is more important.

    I don't see anyone complain when it's a people coup, and everyone get shafted too.

  10. #10
    Thailand Expat
    Join Date
    Jun 2014
    Last Online
    @
    Posts
    18,022
    Quote Originally Posted by Humbert View Post
    This regime has a very narrow world view and is now trying to redefine language in order to control the thinking of the masses. Most Thais will go along without even recognizing how they are being manipulated.
    Militarism = Happiness

  11. #11
    Thailand Expat
    zygote1's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2010
    Last Online
    20-05-2015 @ 10:43 AM
    Location
    Hua Hin
    Posts
    1,114
    Perhaps they should sponsor a contest and come up with a new term.
    The prize can be an all expense weekend in Pattani.
    My contribution to TAT was the slogan, "the other Patts" and "the city of hotties in a hijab". TAT should get on board with this.

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •