Showing posts with label Thai police fire tear gas against crowd. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thai police fire tear gas against crowd. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Trouble in Thailand (video)

Temple gargoyle guardians, Wat Phra Kaew Thai Buddhist temple (Naxerdam/flickr.com)
(Bravo, June 2013) Follow the work of police in Southeast Asia as they deal with British travellers who are experiencing trouble with Thai authorities.
  
Thai Buddha (Earlsy1/flickr)
Theravada Buddhist Thailand is one of the world's greatest spiritual tourist destinations. It is also  famous for other kinds of tourism. Unfortunately, it is not safe for either at the moment.

Bangkok, after enduring many troubles in the restive and tsunami-damaged south, is being rocked by political uprisings to oust the prime minister and create more socioeconomic equality.

In addition, the "Free land" is cracking down on mostly European foreign (farang) tourists.

Thailand is surprisingly devotional and pious.
There is also a long standing rivalry erupting again with neighboring Buddhist nation Cambodia and a long simmering border dispute. These rivalries extend back to the time of feudal kings and previous kingdoms.

Now with tourist dollars on the line for the lucrative spiritual-tourist trade, due to the ancient jungle temple on that border, nothing is being taken for granted or resolved amicably.

Our monks protest, too (stuff.co.nz)
Western investment and influence are steering Thailand to follow the tried and true belligerent model of western expansion as it rivals Japan and China for top Asian economy, a title which slips further away due to external currency manipulations, accusations of corruption versus fresh promises of reform and an increasing political rivalry between the Red Shirts (UDD, presumably the good guys opposing dictators and coups) versus the Yellow Shirts (PAD, the economic elites, "patriotic" conservatives in league with the military).

In 2010 there was blood on the streets as police state tactics (with paramilitary forces trained by the West) were deployed to squelch social unrest as a result of corrupt elections and growing inequality. 

Thursday, February 7, 2013

Police State: Manhunt (UPDATES)

SCPR.org; Wisdom Quarterly
"Dangerous" protesters surrounded by paramilitary security force RNC (Ted S. Warren/AP)
LA's financial outlook has improved, but CAO says sales tax hike on March ballot is still necessary. Mayoral candidates are opposed.
 
[Now the Killer LAPD Manhunt's massive display of force and waste of resources in support of a Police Department vendetta will mean more taxes and even more funding (for automatic weaponry and other paramilitary gear and the like). Just as Oakland recently voted to bring in former LAPD Chief William Bratton, who works toward setting up a massive worldwide policing force, LAPD will likely begin instituting the draconian policies Bratton dictates/advises. Stop and frisk, racial profiling, shoot first ask questions later?]

Thursday, December 1, 2011

How to "kettle" (corral) a crowd (video)

Wisdom Quarterly (EDITORIAL ANALYSIS)


Many question if the police tactic of "kettling," or containing, protesters is "appropriate and proportionate." But how does kettling work? And how has it developed into a tactic-of-choice when it comes to controlling large, peaceful crowds?

  • STEP 1: Order demonstrators to disperse.
  • STEP 2: Keep them from dispersing.
  • STEP 3: Arrest them for failure to disperse.

Kettling in theory (without mass arrests)

"Kettling" is the police tactic of punishing crowds for gathering by subjecting them to disorienting strategies then arresting them in their confusion. Crowds are ordered to leave, then kept from leaving, then subjected to various forms of excessive force and brutality:
Iraq War Veteran and peace activist Scott Olsen is a victim of a canister to the head used as a projectile since it was aimed his head close range. It left him with brain damage, mute, unconscious, and bleeding.


Kettling in actual practice

Why corral and concentrate a crowd being lawfully-ordered to leave the area?

The peaceful and legally assembled demonstrators will instantly be made criminals engaged in criminal conduct (illegal assembly, failure to disperse, disregarding a lawful order, disturbing the peace, loitering, "terrorist" activity, or anything since these are only allegations to be litigated later and anyone disagreeing can expect "resisting arrest" to be added charges).

Once they are guilty of a subsequent "crime," in addition to illegal assembly, they are subject to arrest by all means necessary. And paramilitary police feel free to deploy all of their toys on them to justify all of their expensive SWAT and military crowd control training.

Riot police kettle demonstrators at Camp for Climate Action, part of the G-20 London summit protests.

It is unethical, immoral, and possibly illegal, but it is effective as an excuse to arrest, handcuff (cutting circulation to the hands as a matter of course and punishment), process, detain, jail, possibly charge, remand into custody, extract bail from, and force to appear before a magistrate, traumatize, fine, justify expensive training and equipment, and possibly imprison...

All for what end? To have a chilling effect on free speech and silence lawful dissent and deter civil disobedience. Obey. Shop. Focus on your electronic devices and distracting screens.

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Controlling protesters with new tear gas (video)

Seven, Macpherson, PFC Sandoval (Wisdom Quarterly); ; Jesse Ventura
The globalists, the New World Order, the military-industrial complex (MIC), the nagas -- call it what we may, something is afoot. And it is made in the USA. We develop the anti-civilian tactics. DARPA, HAARP, DUMBs, universities, CIA labs, Monsanto Inc., "Area 51" type installations... We sell weapons to the world. We merge corporations (industry) with the Pentagon/CIA (military) in a way not seen since Hitler's Germany. One useful definition of "fascism" is the merging of state power and capitalism.


FEMA concentration camps, martial law, disinformation/propaganda


"Say it, don't spray it!" UC Davis Chancellor Katehi is told after US police use noxious chemicals against Occupy Movement students, sending them to the hospital with chemical burns and unable to breathe.

Everyone calls the other side "NAZIS," so the expression becomes nothing more than a little flung mud which is easy to wash off. But our MIC tests its munitions, secret weapons, and tactical innovations on other populations before employing them here. It helps Israeli nationalists oppress indigenous Palestinians. It flies drones over Pakistan and Somalia. It spies on Iraq, Iran, Korea, Egypt, Yemen, Syria, Haiti, the Republic of Berkeley, and anyone else it may wish to later say is aligned in an "axis of evil."

The new gas used in Egypt burns, disorients, asphyxiates, and affects the nervous system in a strange way. It seems to serve as a chemical mind control agent, not merely an offensive caustic gas to disperse protesters like before. What has Combined Tactical Systems of Jamestown, Penn. created for the MIC?
What is the military-industrial complex? Now 84% of Pentagon officials go on to work in high paid jobs for private defense contractors (Letters and Politics, Nov. 22, 2011).

Friday, October 28, 2011

Police attempt to murder Iraq War Vet (video)

Wisdom Quarterly
Using threats and force to press for a triumph of will over others is a police state tactic once called "fascism" and now called special weapons and tactics (SWAT) operations.

() Eyewitnesses in Oakland have put up footage of the police's violent tactics against activists. Here is one of the latest videos of the incident referred to in Marina Portnaya's report. An Iraq War veteran was injured.



Marine veteran Scott Olsen is seen lying on the ground after being shot in the head by a police officer wielding a tear gas canister propeller, fracturing Olsen's skull and swelling his brain. When a group of activists run to his aid, a policeman deliberately takes aim at the protesters, misusing a "non-lethal" weapon in an illegally deadly fashion with complete immunity. Police then lob a flash bomb at the group to prevent them from aiding Olsen. It goes off immediately, terrorizing the unarmed civilians being subjected to indiscriminate deadly force.
()

"Veterans for Peace" member Scott Olsen was critically wounded by Oakland Police who are believed to have been joined by 15 other government agencies. Together they fired on unarmed American citizens. When the government uses violence to suppress its people it is a form of fascism.

Monday, September 5, 2011

Purging the Police (video)

Wisdom Quarterly
“Those who would give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety.” -Ben Franklin (stevequayle.com / infowars/prison planet)

The police and paramilitary personnel will be the second to go when the purge comes. First they will be used to terrify, violate, arrest, and kill "undesirables" as defined by the military-industrial complex establishing a new "world order." It sounds Orwellian, and it is coming from the mouths of libertarians not liberals. Why would the state (NSA, CIA, TSA, White House, NSC, FBI, Homeland Security) and, moreover, the Shadow Government (NorthCom, higher level Pentagon, DUMBs) kill police after using them to implement plans against a resisting population? Why would they kill them before? They are needed to do the dirty work of betraying civilians before they get hung out to dry by those giving them orders.

Monday, October 6, 2008

Thai police fire tear gas against crowd

Sutin Wannabovorn (AP)


Tear gas shot into crowd by Thai police, Bangkok, Oct. 7, 2008 (Reuters)

BANGKOK, Thailand — Police fired tear gas canisters Tuesday at several thousand demonstrators trying to bar lawmakers from Parliament, injuring dozens of them and heating up a political crisis that has gripped the country for six weeks. Reporters at the scene heard sounds of gunfire, but police Maj. Gen. Viboon Bangthamai said that only tear gas was being used against the crowd in Bangkok. Forty-six people were injured, including two seriously, said Petpong Kumtonkitjakarn of the Erawan Medical Center.

"One of them lost his leg, another was hit with shrapnel in the chest," he said. The morning clashes came just hours before Prime Minister Somchai Wongsawat, who was sworn in Sept. 25, was scheduled to deliver his government's policy statement to lawmakers.

Protesters from the People's Alliance for Democracy — which is seeking the government's resignation and a major overhaul of the electoral system — have occupied the grounds of the prime minister's office for six weeks. Late Monday, they expanded their protest by marching to Parliament, vowing to block lawmakers from entering the building.

Heavily armed police charge crowds protesting government (AP)

After the morning clashes, thousands of protesters regrouped in front of Parliament where speakers addressed the crowd from a makeshift stage. "Fight with us in protecting this country! Stay with us here until we have our victory," a speaker told the cheering crowd. The action by alliance activists came in response to the recent arrests of two of its leaders, and seemed intended to spark a confrontation to revive its flagging movement.

The alliance says Somchai is a proxy for ex-Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, who was ousted in 2006 by military leaders who accused him of corruption and who now resides in exile. Somchai is a brother-in-law of Thaksin.

Riot police rioting: tear gas is shot into crowd, Bangkok, Thailand (Reuters)

When protesters originally took over the grounds of Government House on Aug. 26, their intention was to oust then Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej — whom they also accused of being a puppet of Thaksin. They later said they also opposed his successor, Somchai. Samak was dismissed from office on Sept. 9 by a court decision that found him guilty on a conflict of interest charge. He had accepted pay for hosting a TV show while in office.

At the nearby Government House, protest leaders called for supporters to join their ranks. "Brothers and sisters, please come out and help us," said Somsak Kosaisuk, one of nine protest leaders. "We were protesting peacefully. I urge you to come out to join us in our fight against this illegitimate government."

Civilians run as police begin riot, firing canisters into crowd causing mayhem (AP)

"We will not stop," Somsak said. "We will fight until we have our victory!" The alliance claims Thailand's rural majority — who gave strong election victories to the ruling People's Power Party — is too poorly educated to responsibly choose their representatives and says they are susceptible to vote buying.

The protest group wants the country to abandon the system of one-man, one-vote, and instead have a mixed system in which some representatives are chosen by certain professions and social groups. They have not explained how exactly such a system would work or what would make it less susceptible to manipulation.
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A bomb went off, possibly thrown by police, severing this man's lower leg (AP)