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Tag: bangkok


Chinese Opera

May 7th, 2010 — 6:38pm

Some time ago I went to a Chinese opera in Bangkok. The shows are put on by a troupe of traveling performers on a makeshift stage, usually set up in a backstreet somewhere in the city.

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They kindly let me backstage and I spent an hour or so snapping away while they got ready for the show.

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As with the shots from my recent post on Myanmar, these where taken a couple of years ago and could be a lot better but they do have something about them.

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I’d love to pay another visit to the opera next time they are in Bangkok. 

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Keep Bangkok Tidy

May 1st, 2010 — 5:25pm

This morning, in need of a distraction, I took a walk around the Ratchaprasong site in the heart of Bangkok’s main shopping district. The Red Shirts continue to make themselves at home. Despite a heavy military and police presence in the surrounding area they have failed to prevent protesters spreading further down the Ratchaprasong intersection and side streets. The streets below the skytrain and the walkways above are now home for hundreds of defiant Red Shirts. Barricades of tyres and razor wire block every entrance point. It’s hard to see how the area can be cleared without bloodshed, a fact that may be causing a delay in the long expected crackdown.

The shot above shows one of many protesters asleep on the pavement of what was one of Bangkok’s busiest shopping districts. The poster behind him is to raise awareness for the Governor’s ‘keep Bangkok tidy’ campaign.

1 comment » | Politics

Reds Remain Defiant

April 28th, 2010 — 4:02pm

The Red Shirt protests continue at Ratchaprasong and the rhetoric from both sides grows increasingly hard line. The last few days, however, have been more peaceful than usual. It’s hard not to believe that it is just the calm before a storm.

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Today, a group of hardcore Red Shirts gathered behind the Silom- Radjadamri barricade – now reinforced with razor wire – and readied themselves for a move to another site within Bangkok – something that the government has said it will not allow.

It’s impossible to describe this motley crew as anything more than thugs. They have also been told by leaders to stop wearing red shirts so they can move around easier outside the main camp. Armed with staves, golf clubs and an assortment of other weapons they do little to help the genuine plight of the rural poor.

Meanwhile, at lunch hour on Silom Road a small but vocal demonstration was held by office workers and local business owners. Staunchly royalist and distinctly middle-class the group sang the national anthem while waving the Thai flag and condemning the Red actions.

As an outsider who has lived in Thailand for 12 years, it’s hard to watch the rift in society grow. My affection for this country runs deep. It has been generous to me, given me the love of my life and memories that will sustain me in my twilight years.

But I fear for Thailand’s future. Labels of red, yellow, pink and multi-coloured serve only to oversimplify the complex problems inherent in a hierarchical, corrupt and unjust society; problems that have never been addressed. The common thread running through all coloured flags is leadership motivated by self-interest, greed and power. In the end, as usual, it’s the common man who will lose out. Undoubtedly order will soon be restored by force but the division in society could take decades to heal.

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Violence at Silom

April 26th, 2010 — 9:36am

Last night the situation turned nasty and blood was spilled with several grenade attacks in the Silom Road area. One person was killed and many injured. The attacks are suspected to have been carried out by hardcore elements within the Red Shirt camp. Over the past few weeks there have been many grenade attacks across the country. Last night also saw running street battles between Red Shirts and the so-called pro-government ‘multi-coloureds’.  

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After the trouble had died down, the Red Shirts sat atop their barricade and kept a lookout for further attacks by ‘multi-coloureds’ or the military.

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The army was on high alert, cordoning off Silom Road, setting up blockades, and shutting down sections of the BTS skytrain and MRT underground. Eventually the trouble fizzled out but many people believe that because of the escalating violence and further disruption to the city the long-expected crackdown by armed forces is now inevitable.  

 

In the early hours of this morning, a large contingent of police lined up in front of the barricade but eventually stood down without confrontation. Minor demonstrations against the Red Shirts took place throughout the day.

  

Red Shirts remain alert at the barricade and have been told not to drink and remain vigilant. Guards with binoculars are on constant lookout for the arrival of armed forces. Oil has also been poured on the road in front of the defensive barrier.

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Army Braced for Trouble

April 22nd, 2010 — 9:31pm

Tension is running pretty high in Bangkok at the moment with the redshirts continuing to defy calls to abandon the city centre site they have occupied for several weeks. A barricade of sharpened bamboo poles erected at the Silom-Radjadamri Road intersection is growing daily as car and truck tryes are piled against it. Bricks and assorted rubble has also been stockpiled for use against the military when the expected crackdown begins.

Tension is running pretty high in Bangkok at the moment with the redshirts continuing to defy calls to abandon the city centre site they have occupied for several weeks. A barricade of sharpened bamboo poles erected at the Silom-Radjadamri Road intersection is growing daily as car and truck tryes are piled against it. Bricks and assorted rubble has also been stockpiled for use against the military when the expected crackdown begins.

Last night a group of government supporters staged a boisterous protest in front of the redshirt defences, provoking the occasional violent skirmish that put the soldiers on edge. Several units mobilised and lined up in Silom Road ready for action. Many, no more than teenagers, looked extremely apprehensive.

Despite some within the government saying that a peaceful resolution could still be found, Col Sansern Kaewkamnerd, spokesman for the Centre for the Resolutions of Emergency Situations, warned protestors to leave the area or face decisive action. Tonight the situation remains extremely uneasy.

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