For much of April and May, thousands of antigovernment protesters
occupied a central commercial district in Bangkok, the capital of
Thailand. Dubbed the Red Shirts for the color of their political
movement (their rivals are Yellow Shirts), the activists sought to bring
down a government they saw as elitist and undemocratic. Their political
figurehead, former Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, has lived in
exile ever since he was deposed in a 2006 coup (in 2008 Thaksin was
convicted of corruption and sentenced in absentia). Commentators saw the
protests as emblematic of larger fissures in Thai society — between the
big city and the countryside, the rich and the poor, royalists and
populists. But on the streets of Bangkok, Thailand's complex,
dysfunctional politics took a backseat to sheer spectacle. Red Shirt
protesters spilled hundreds of liters of their own blood in a
stomach-turning act of agitprop. Later, after Bangkok's continued
paralysis proved unacceptable to the government, the scene turned
violent, with running street battles between government forces and
protesters, some of whom were armed with pistols and even a few
rudimentary homemade rocket launchers
Tuesday, October 30, 2012
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