Thailand's Tourism & Junta Damaged by 2nd Bomb
Thailand's Tourism & Junta Damaged by 2nd Bomb
By Richard S. Ehrlich
BANGKOK, Thailand -- Jittery and
suspicious residents and tourists are
trying to enjoy the
tropical pleasures of this sprawling river port,
but with
no evidence about who is bombing Bangkok or why, many
people
fear more danger ahead.
The coup-installed
military regime which seized power in May 2014
is
suddenly unable to continue its stilted propaganda
boasts that the
junta is "bringing happiness to the
people" by making the country safe
and secure.
"A girl
who works in my bank was killed in the bombing,"
a
white-collar executive said softly.
The worried
executive displayed a photo on her iPhone of a
smiling
young woman who now had a red heart drawn around
her as a funeral
memorial.
"At work, my friends just
talk about who they think did it, and they
spend their
time looking on Internet for updates," she said.
"I'm afraid."
River ferry passengers ran screaming for their
lives on August 18
after someone tossed a small bomb
toward a pier along Bangkok's
majestic Chao Phraya
river.
The bomb just missed a busy passenger footbridge and splashed into the water.
No one was injured, but the
explosion forced a huge volcanic volume of
water into the
air, drenching everyone nearby.
The ferry pier is popular
with tourists and residents who can climb
aboard
motorized boats to cross the river, or travel north or
south
along its wide meandering route to other piers and
towns.
A horrific pipe bomb blast on August 17, several
miles away at a Hindu
shrine thronged with worshippers
and tourists, killed at least 20
people and wounded more
than 120 others.
After that blast, thousands of security
forces cautiously took up
positions throughout Bangkok,
but most of this modern capital appeared
relatively
relaxed and normal.
Thailand's U.S.-trained and equipped
intelligence agencies, armed
forces, police and other
personnel are following basic clues such as
CCTV video of
the two bomb attacks, talking to taxi drivers
and
eyewitnesses, and asking the public to report
suspicious individuals.
Authorities have published blurry
photographs of a pale-skinned young
man who appeared to
have bushy dark hair and wore shorts with a
yellow
T-shirt.
Police said he was their main suspect
because he appeared on CCTV
video to have brought a
backpack into the shrine's open courtyard and
departed
without it, moments before the explosion on August
17.
Coup leader Prayuth Chan-ocha, who awarded himself
absolute power when
he took over the prime ministry and
retired as army chief last year,
appeared to have no hard
evidence proving who was launching the
unprecedented
attacks.
But the results appear obvious and unavoidable.
The bloodshed's devastating effect is
expected to soon impact
Thailand's lucrative tourism
industry, which was one of the few money
makers not
flattened by junta's lack of economic experience.
Upcoming
tourists' cancellations are expected to cause losses
for
countless hotels, restaurants, flights, light
industries, the service
sector and others who profit from
foreign visitors.
The two bomb attacks aimed for Bangkok's
softest targets in an
apparent effort to cripple the
travel industry and prove the military
regime was
helpless to defend its own capital.
Some people voiced
complaints that Bangkok's traditionally lax
security at
public transportation stations had not been
increased
despite the bombings.
On Bangkok's public
elevated monorail Skytrain transport system, one
foreign
resident said he experienced "zero bag search" during
his
morning and evening commutes.
City workers
meanwhile scrubbed the streets around first
attack,
washing away blood and debris from the August 17
explosion.
In a terse, brief appearance during a
nationwide government-controlled
TV broadcast on August
18, Mr. Prayuth appeared worn, distraught
and
perplexed.
"There is still a group of individuals
in our country who harbor and
carry out their ill wishes
against the nation," Mr. Prayuth said
without identifying
them.
"They aim to score political gain, or to destroy our
economy, or
tourism, or are driven by other motives," he
said, indicating his
junta did not know who was bombing
Bangkok or why.
"As for foreigners living in Thailand --
including embassies,
consulates, and international
organizations -- the government would
like to assure you
that we will take care of your safety, your
lives,
property and interests, with the utmost effort and
we will keep you
informed of the news."
He later told
reporters, "Today we have seen the
closed-circuit
footage, we saw some suspects, but it was
not clear. We have to find
them first."
The military's
powerful Internal Security Operation Command (ISOC)
was
reportedly pursuing three possible motives, including
opponents
against the coup-installed military regime,
infighting among the
junta's officials who will soon be
promoted or demoted during a
reshuffle, or possible
international terrorism by Islamists linked to
Iran and
the Middle East.
ISOC "ruled out insurgents from the deep
South," said a brief report
in The Nation newspaper which
did not elaborate.
In the absence of any transparent
accountable investigation, Prime
Minister Prayuth's harsh
restrictions on freedom of speech are
expected to result
in rumors and propaganda pushed by all sides
anxious to
use the explosion for their own political
reasons.
Security forces tried to determine if the
location of the blast was
symbolic, while no one
immediately claimed responsibility.
Ratchaprasong intersection is equivalent to New York's Times Square.
It
became a blood-stained site in March 2010 when the military
crushed
the last stronghold of a pro-democracy
insurrection resulting in 90
deaths, mostly civilians,
during nine weeks of clashes.
The intersection is flanked
by some of Bangkok's most expensive
shopping malls,
five-star hotels and condominiums, and is underneath
a
packed commuters' Skytrain monorail serviced by a
popular station.
The elegant Erawan shrine, dedicated to a
four-faced statue of the
Hindu god Brahma, was also
damaged by the bomb attached to a pole
along its
decorative iron fence.
The shrine's casualties included
some of the throngs of worshippers
and tourists who
squeeze into its open courtyard every day and evening
to
pray at the gilded Brahma and watch ornately costumed Thai
women
perform ritual dances.
The shrine is surrounded
by Thai vendors selling flowers, incense,
temple icons
and live sparrows trapped in bamboo cages which are
set
free by superstitious customers who expect a reward
of good luck for
their good deed.
Thailand's population
is majority Buddhist, but the monarchy and
government
include Hindu deities among its official symbols
and
institutions.
The shrine is popular among Buddhists
because Siddhartha Gautama --
the Buddha -- was born as a
Hindu 2,558 years ago, and Hinduism's
ancient religion's
clergy are influential in Thai society which also
absorbs
countless animist beliefs.
The military's ISOC is heavily
involved in fighting Islamist
insurgents in southern
Thailand, and also provides intelligence and
security for
this Southeast Asian nation's other major military
and
political problems.
Thailand's politicized military
has faced difficulty containing the
strategy-savvy
Islamist guerrillas in the south along the border
with
Malaysia.
Bombs hidden in cars, motorcycles and
cooking gas cylinders are
frequently used by the southern
rebels, but there has never been any
publicly confirmed
attacks here in Bangkok by the insurgents.
Minority ethnic
Malay-Thai Muslims, fighting for an independent
Pattani
homeland, form a majority in three southern provinces
where
fighting on all sides has resulted in more than
4,500 people killed
since an upsurge in 2004.
The
explosion was "more likely to be some anti-junta
activists,
although the bombing appears to be
sophisticated," said
Washington-based Council on Foreign
Relations fellow for Southeast
Asia, Josh
Kurlantzick.
The "bombing was clearly intended for the
highest possible
casualties," Mr. Kurlantzick
tweeted.
Thailand's military regime, which has ruled since
the 2014 coup, has
been hit with rising criticism even
among supporters, mostly because
its bustling economy has
flattened since the junta seized power.
The political
conflict mentioned by ISOC presumably referred to
the
coup-installed regime's difficulty in crushing
pro-democracy
supporters angry that their popularly
elected prime minister Yingluck
Shinawatra was ousted in
the coup and the constitution
subsequently
cancelled.
Gen. Prayuth is currently
orchestrating a new constitution which his
opponents
predict will be a "constitution from hell".
Leaked drafts
and proposals suggest the constitution will
allow
appointed military regime figures and collaborating
technocrats to
continue their domination by severely
restricting the number of
elected political seats in the
next parliament.
Gen. Prayuth earlier participated in a
2006 coup which toppled Ms.
Yingluck's older and more
popular brother, former prime minister
Thaksin
Shinawatra, who then fled abroad to avoid a two-year
prison
sentence for corruption.
Last week, Mr. Thaksin
told his followers to oppose the next
constitution,
sparking concerns that fresh confrontations may
be
looming.
Hours after the explosion, Mr. Thaksin
expressed his condolences on
his official Twitter
account, and condemned the assault.
ISOC's speculation
that Gen. Prayuth's upcoming reshuffle may be
linked to
the explosion may involve his upcoming shuffle of
his
hand-picked, lackluster ministers and other
administrators.
Some Thai analysts suspect splits may be
worsening within the military
and also among the junta's
supporters because the regime has not
solved many of this
country's woes but has succeeded in promoting
Gen.
Prayuth's allies.
In August 2006, after surviving
what he described as an assassination
attempt, then-prime
minister Thaksin said a car bomb packed with
explosives
near his house was a plot by military officers to stage
a
coup.
Mr. Thaksin's Defense Minister General
Thammarak Isarangkun agreed and
told journalists at the
time: "There is a movement to bring the
government to
collapse and to kill the government's leader."
One month
after Mr. Thaksin expressed his fears, he was ousted in
a
non-violent coup.
ISOC's mention of international
terrorism reflects previous attacks in
Bangkok by
Islamists allegedly linked to Iran and other Shiite
groups
in the Middle East.
But those occasional bomb
blasts and possible assassination attempts
have usually
been described as plots against Israeli diplomats.
For
example, in February 2012, three Iranian men were arrested
shortly
after setting off a series of clay-like C-4 bombs
in Bangkok which
destroyed their rented house, damaged a
taxi, blew off the legs of one
of the Iranians, and
injured four Thai civilians.
The arrested Iranians
allegedly made their bombs by hollowing out
cheap plastic
radios, which they stuffed with C-4 explosives,
several
magnets, and some steel ball bearings to increase
the destruction.
The pin and handle of a grenade was
shoved into the side of each
radio, so the attacker could
approach a car, magnetically stick the
radio onto the
side of the vehicle, and then manually pull a
circular
ring to yank out the pin -- similar to a hand
grenade.
The Iranians were allegedly building bombs with
C-4 explosives in a
Bangkok house when it blew up,
apparently by accident, prompting the
trio to
flee.
Police said a fourth Iranian man suspected of
involvement, plus the
group's alleged Iranian female
accomplice, successfully escaped by
flying from Bangkok
to Tehran.
Ironically, the entire Ratchaprasong
intersection and surrounding area
is one of the most
heavily monitored urban crossroads on earth, with
dozens
of CCTV cameras mounted at scores of locations, installed
after
the bloody end of the 2010
insurrection.
Pedestrians and vehicles approaching and
passing through the area can
be observed and recorded
from multiple angles, step-by-step non-stop
throughout
the intersection and surrounding streets, through
live
feeds monitored on screens in a police bunker in a
nearby five-star
hotel.
Those CCTV cameras are also
linked to internal CCTV cameras inside
surrounding
shopping malls, hotels, office and residential
buildings
and elevators, which allow police to watch if
their target travels
from the street into a nearby
building.
Fortunately for the blasts' injured victims,
several well-equipped
hospitals and clinics are very
close to the site, which police later
cordoned off during
their investigation.
Several Thais and foreigners
expressed dread that more confrontations
may
result.
They also predict Thailand's lucrative tourism
industry will
immediately suffer cancellations because
many travelers come to
Bangkok for shopping and
sightseeing in and around the Ratchaprasong
intersection
during their visit.
Louis Vuitton's opulent showroom, the
Grand Hyatt Erawan's plush
hotel, and other multinational
venues near the site suffered shattered
glass from the
explosion.
"The perpetrators are cruel and heartless
because they intended to
take lives," National Police
Chief Somyot Poompanmoung announced in a
televised
broadcast.
"Everyone knows that at 7 p.m. at the shrine
there are a lot of people
gathered around there -- both
Thais and foreign tourists -- and if
they plant a bomb
there they know, or can assume, they will
cause
casualties.
"The blast radius of the bomb is
about 100 meters (about 325 feet).
The bomb experts say
that the bomb weighed about three kilograms
(about six
pounds).
"We haven't ruled out any motive. We are putting
great importance on
every motive," Mr. Somyot
said.
ends