INFO: SNCC's 50th Anniversary > from The Root

SNCC Veterans Retain the Old Fire

50 years after they launched a movement that changed America, they see much more to be done.

  • | Posted: April 16, 2010 at 2:26 PM
Willie Ricks. (c) Jason Miccolo Johnson
The SNCC veterans who gathered with hundreds of supporters at Shaw this week to celebrate the golden anniversary of the organization's founding have grown gray.  Some are  stooped.  Some  use walkers and wheelchair.  But for those I walked with, the righteous anger of their youth burns as hot as ever.

There is no more dramatic measure of the distance our society has traveled during the past half century than the fact that 50 years ago signing your name could be an act of extraordinary bravery.

 In 1960, when the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) was founded on the campus of Shaw University in Raleigh, N.C, even the most ordinary  acts could trigger a rejection, a beating, a jail sentence, or even a violent death-if  the actor was an African American daring to break  the color line that divided our nation into two zones, one black, one white, separate and decidedly unequal.

Wendell Paris remembers Mrs. Jones, an elderly Alabama woman who had lived under the yoke of segregation so long that when the time came for her to register to vote, "she was so nervous she could not sign her name."   Repeatedly, she would affix her signature to the form and then  anxiously erase it.  Finally, after weeks of indecision,  she signed her name and left it there.  She, as civil rights activists used to say, finally got a made up mind.

The triumph in Paris's voice as he recounts the story  reminds us that the revolution that we call the civil rights movement was  made up of thousands of little moments like that.  It succeeded because thousands and thousands of downtrodden people like Mrs. Jones finally got a made up mind .

SNCC members were the shock troops of the civil rights movement, putting their bodies on the line to help black folks make up their minds. They, and colleagues from the Congress of Racial Equality, rode the buses in the Freedom Rides, sat in at lunch counters, opened Freedom schools, and encouraged long-disenfranchised people to register and vote in some of the most dangerous corners of the segregated south.

Listen to Willie Ricks,  now known  by the African name Musaka Dada,  who, in 1966, etched his name into history by shouting the  burning phrase, "black power,"  on  a civil rights  march through Mississippi.  Ricks, at 67, sounds more militant now than he was then.  "Voting is not a solution to our problems,"  he says.  "Freedom only comes through revolution!  The capitalistic system is exploiting us now as much as it ever did, with a black mayor, with a black governor,  and now with a black president, and we will continue to be exploited until we destroy the capitalistic system completely and liberate Africa completely under a  socialistic government."

Few  of the SNCC veterans I talked with would use language as colorful as that.  Some of them have made peace with the capitalistic system Ricks deplores.  At least three have been college presidents.  Several others have been recipients of prestigious MacArthur "genius" grants.  But all of them would agree with his notion that the movement SNCC belonged to left unfinished business that Obama's election did not resolve. 

In a view expressed by many, Ivanhoe Donaldson, now chairman of the board of a  national polling organization in Washington, DC,  says Obama needs a revived and  movement to  both pressure and protect him. 

"I think that everybody who was in SNCC today still has an interest in social justice..  Many of them are still agitators or activists, engaged in all kinds of things in their community,"  says  Donaldson.  " Some of them  are still, like Stokely Carmichael used to say,  ready for the revolution.   If we really want change, we may have to go back  into the streets and remind Obama from whence he came. "

Like Mrs. Jones in Wendell Paris's  story,  these movement veterans still have made-up minds.

Jack White is regular contributor to The Root.

 

INFO: GE: 7,000 tax returns, $0 U.S. tax bill > from CNNMoney.com

GE: 7,000 tax returns, $0 U.S. tax bill

By Annalyn Censky, staff reporter

 

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- General Electric filed more than 7,000 income tax returns in hundreds of global jurisdictions last year, but when push came to shove, the company owed the U.S. government a whopping bill of $0.

How'd it pull off that trick? By losing lots of money.

 

Tax bills for 5 corporate giants
The 2009 income tax bills for America's biggest companies ranged from $0 to $15 billion. Here's why.

GE had plenty of earnings last year -- just not in the United States. For tax purposes, the company's U.S. operations lost $408 million, while its international businesses netted a $10.8 billion profit.

That left GE (GE, Fortune 500) with no U.S. profit left for Uncle Sam to tax. Corporations typically face a 35% federal income tax on their earnings. Thanks to its deductions and adjustments, GE reported an actual U.S. federal income tax rate of negative 10.5%. It got to add a "tax benefit" of $1.1 billion back into its reported earnings.

"This is the first time in at least decades that GE has reported negative U.S. pretax income and it reflects the worst economy since the Great Depression," Anne Eisele, GE's director of financial communications, said via e-mail.

But what about the $10.8 billion profit overseas? GE is "indefinitely" deferring income tax payments on those profits, Eisele said.

It may seem like accounting magic, but it's completely legit.

GE isn't the only "Top 5" company on this year's Fortune 500 list that owed no income taxes. Bank of America (BAC, Fortune 500), which suffered major losses in 2009, included a tax benefit of $1.9 billion in its annual profit.

"That's one way of escaping taxes," said Scott Hodge, president of the Tax Foundation. "Companies get to deduct their losses, so if there's no earnings, then they pay no income tax."

But GE isn't exactly escaping all tax-related pain: The company paid almost $23 billion in taxes to governments around the world from 2000 to 2009, Eisele said.

Plus, paying the accountants to crank out 7,000 tax returns can't be cheap.

And then there's all the lawyers needed to defend those returns. GE filed tax paperwork in more than 250 jurisdictions around the world last year. "We are under examination or engaged in tax litigation in many of these jurisdictions," the company dryly notes in its annual report.

GE may not owe the IRS, but it still has to file -- and its filings are epic.

In 2006, as the IRS ramped up its corporate e-filing program, the tax agency actually issued a celebratory press release when it processed GE's tax return. On paper, the return -- the nation's largest -- would have totaled a massive 24,000 pages. But instead, the IRS was able to upload the 237 MB document in under an hour.

Reading it, though, is apparently taking a bit longer. The IRS is currently auditing GE's tax returns for 2003-2007. To top of page

 

 

HAITI: Upscale school tries to expel 11,000 families camping on its grounds > from Happily Natural

Haiti: Upscale school tries to expel 11,000 families camping on its grounds

by Ansel Herz

Port au Prince (IPS) – For decades, the Saint Louis de Gonzague school has groomed some of Haiti’s most elite political players. Francois Duvalier, the iron-fisted dictator who ruled Haiti for 14 years, sent his son to the school. About 1,500 children of Haiti’s wealthiest class attend each year.

 

This family – with a delightful sense of humor – is one of the 11,000 families camping on the grounds of Saint Louis de Gonzague School in Port au Prince since their homes were destroyed by the Jan. 12 earthquake.

Within days of the January earthquake, the sparse concrete grounds of the Gonazague secondary school became home to nearly 11,000 Haitian families, driven out of destroyed neighborhoods in central Port au Prince.

Now the school’s director wants to reopen the school. The government encouraged schools to resume classes on Monday, calling it another small step towards normalcy.

The potential reopening of the school has inspired anything but calm among internally displaced people at Saint Louis de Gonzague. They have been threatened with expulsion by force.

“Everyone is nervous right now. If they force us to leave it will be second catastrophe,” said Elivre Constant. “A lot of people here don’t have anywhere to go. They have kids. They won’t be safe.”

Constant, a member of the camp’s organizing committee, said she heard police would come within days to move people out. “The headmaster threatened us with tear gas,” she said.

The Huffington Post reports that Father Patrick Belanger, the director of the school, has destroyed latrines built by the camp’s committee and prevented aid agencies from distributing food inside the camp for the past month.

But life has settled in here.

At night, vendors sell candies, drinks and meats in a market near the camp’s entrance. A few men wait beside a big white tent to have their hair cut by a barber inside. Motorcycle taxis ferry people in and out of the camp’s inner areas.

Doctors Without Borders operates a huge field hospital and warehouse situated near the rear of the camp. Orderly lines queue outside the gate each morning for medical care.

“We agree that a country without education is unacceptable, but if they push us out they need to move us to a place where the conditions exist to live, a normal place,” Bernard Saint-Fleur told IPS. His family came to Gonzague the day after the quake destroyed their nearby home.

Father Belanger and Mayor Wilson Jeudy of Port au Prince’s Delmas district have reportedly offered new land for the camp’s residents. But camp-dwellers say the area has enough space for only 500 people.

 

Only two of the eight buildings on the campus of the Saint Louis de Gonzague School that serves the crème de la crème of Haitian society survived the earthquake. Now the priests in charge was to force off their property 11,000 families camping there who lost everything. – Photo: F. Brugman, UNESCO

A volunteer-run school for children inside the camp has formed. A statement circulated by International Action Ties, a small U.S.-based NGO operating in the Delmas area, asked, “Why shut down one school serving many for free to reopen one that is private and only services far fewer students?”

In March, IPS reported on the forcible removal of a smaller camp by a Catholic priest from the garden of Villa Manrese. The garden, once crowded with makeshift shelters, is now empty but for three grey UNICEF tents. A free school serving dozens of students has been erected.

Former occupants of the camp moved their makeshift shelters into the surrounding hillside amidst the rubble. They said that food distributions were being well-coordinated by the priest and local organizers. But they fear the heavy rains ahead.

“Why shut down one school serving many for free to reopen one that is private and only services far fewer students?”

Haiti’s constitution recognizes rights for every citizen to “decent housing, education, food and social security.”

And the United Nations’ guiding principles on the rights of internally displaced people include “the right to be protected against forcible return to or resettlement in any place where their life, safety, liberty and/or health would be at risk.”

But there are further unconfirmed reports emerging each week from the disaster zone of IDP (internally displaced people) camps being torn down by private landholders.

A U.N. donors’ conference last week pledged some $10 billion in aid to Haiti, but many NGOs and activists are now questioning both the reconstruction plan and the likelihood that nations will follow through on their financial commitments.

Ansel Herz blogs at http://mediahacker.org.

Share/Bookmark

Related Posts

 

EVENT: Washington, DC—Third World Press Fundraiser

Third World Press Foundation Fundraiser

Date : Saturday, 24 April 2010   Contact : Quraysh Ali Lansana: 773-995-3632

Venue : Parrish Gallery 1054 31st Street N.W., Washington, DC 20007

Description : Third World Press Foundation Fundraiser hosted by Quraysh Ali Lansana and featuring Haki R. Madhubuti and Walter Mosley Saturday, April 24, 2010; 7:00 - 9:30pm at Parrish Gallery 1054 31st Street N.W.; Washington, DC 20007; ph. 773-995-3632 There will be readings from Melanie Henderson, Tony Medina, and Venus Thrash Suggested donations: $50 for a gift bag and one book or $100 for a gift bag and three books To get tickets, visit http://www.twpfoundationdc.eventbrite.com

 

PUB: Motherhood Muse Writing Contest

Writing Contest

The Motherhood Muse WRITING CONTEST


Contents

I.                   Writing Guidelines

II.                Prizes

III.             Deadlines

IV.             Submission Guidelines

V.                Terms & Conditions


I. Writing Guidelines


1. There are two categories that you may choose from: Fiction Short Story and Non-Fiction Literary Essay.

2. The story and characters of the fiction short story must be fiction.

3. Entry must be between 500 – 1,200 words. (The title is not included in the word count.)

4. Use Times New Roman (size 12 font) or Arial (size 11 font), double-space in the email.

5. Word count should be noted at the end of the entry with your personal information.

6. Open prompt for both categories. Any genre is accepted.

7. Each entry will be evaluated for key components of literature (voice, figurative language, original approach to the story or essay, engaging character development, strength of opening and ending, mechanics and structure).


II. Prizes

1. Four total winners will be chosen.

2. First Place for Fiction Short Story and Non-Fiction Literary Essay (each winner will receive): $100 + publication in the e-Zine + interview on the blog

3. Second Place for Fiction Short Story and Non-Fiction Literary Essay (each winner will receive): $50 + publication in the e-Zine + interview on the blog


III. Deadlines


1. SPRING Contest – Deadline is May 1, 2010 (Midnight PST)

2. FALL Contest – Deadline is November 1, 2010 (Midnight PST)


IV. Submission Guidelines


STEP 1: Complete the ENTRY FORM with your name, email address, title of entry, and in comments if your PayPal name/email is different.

STEP 2: Make your payment of $10 by PayPal.

STEP 3: Email your submission to contest@themotherhoodmuse.com This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .

·         DO NOT submit your entry as an attachment. Copy it into the body of the email.

·         In the subject of your email write “fiction” or “non-fiction” for the type of entry.

·         Use the following order for your email entry:

o   Title

o   Entry

o   Your FIRST and LAST name

o   Address

o   Phone number

o   Email address

o   PayPal Transaction ID #

o   WORD COUNT


V. Terms & Conditions


1. The Motherhood Muse Writing Contest is open to all writers.

2. We do not accept published works, works accepted for publication or simultaneous submissions.

3. Each entry must be original, unpublished, and written by the submitting writer.

4. More than one entry per writer is accepted (Repeat Submission Guidelines for each entry).

5. All entries must be designated as either Fiction Short Story or Non-Fiction Literary Essay.

6. The Motherhood Muse will not be responsible for material misdirected or submitted after the contest deadlines.

7. The Motherhood Muse will not be held responsible for submissions that are a breach of copyright.

8. If for any reason The Motherhood Muse Writing Contest does not reach the expected response, the total prize money may be adjusted accordingly.

9. The entry fee is a fee charged for viewing, processing, and judging submission materials.

10. The Motherhood Muse retains first electronic rights with the right to archive indefinitely for the four winning entries, but the winners retain first print rights and any other rights such as anthology rights.

11. In the case you wish to republish your winning entry, we ask for credit to be given to The Motherhood Muse in the credit line of the reprint.

12. The content of each entry should not be overtly religious, political, sexual or violent in nature.

13. The Motherhood Muse will at no time without your express permission sell or share your information with anyone.

14. Entries received after the deadline will be rejected.

15. Entries that are under or over the word count will be rejected. (This DOES NOT include the title and personal information at the end of the entry email.)

16. Entries that are not accompanied with the $10 entry fee (paid via Pay Pal) will be rejected.

17. Entries that are sent as attachments will be rejected.

18. The Motherhood Muse will not disclose Personal Information (including full name) received from Contest entrants without their express permission.

19. The Motherhood Muse will use your Personal Information to notify you if you have won and to ask you about your submitted story. The Motherhood Muse may use your Personal Information to notify you about other events and similar contests The Motherhood Muse holds in the future.

20.  By submitting an entry to The Motherhood Muse Writing Contest, you agree to be bound by these Terms & Conditions.

PUB: Echoes Essay Contest

Echoes of The Right to God
An online journal of everyday spirituality

The first Echoes of The Right to God essay contest is here!
The contest opens for submissions on March 15, 2010, with the deadline
midnight EST on May 15, 2010. Winner will be announced by June 30, 2010.
The winner will be published in Echoes of The Right to God online and
receive a $100 prize.

Announcement!
The essay contest is here!

Echoes of the Right to God Essay Contest Rules

The contest: We're looking for the stories of everyday people, that liberating moment
where you found God ---or God found you--- in your normal life. Large or small,
life-changing or simply an illuminating moment where suddenly the world became
clearer, it's something spiritual and personal between you and God. First prize is $100
and publication in Echoes of The Right to God online magazine (and possible publication
in a future compilation).

Rules and Guidelines

1. Judging: The number one determination of the winner is the inspiration behind the
essay. Quality and creativity of writing is second. We may ask for revisions of the
winning essay before publication.

2. Entries remain the property of the entrant. Non-winning entries will not be returned
and will be destroyed. Please do not send your only copy of your work.

3. Entries must be your original work and previously unpublished. Oh, and it must be
true. No fiction for this contest.

4. Word limit is approximately 1,000 words, but if you need more words to tell your
story, there's no penalty for going over. There's also no harm in using very few words to
tell a powerful story.

5. A co-authored entry would be unusual, because it's your personal experience, but
would be eligible and any prize money will be sent to one person to be divided by the
authors.

6. If the winner is under 18, a parent or guardian will be asked to authorize publication
and acceptance of the prize.

7. First prize is $100 and publication in Echoes of The Right to God online magazine.
Winner is responsible for any taxes or fees. Winner agrees to grant exclusive first
publication rights in any medium to Echoes of the Right to God online magazine for a
period of three months and may include publication in a compilation of winning entries.
Winner also agrees that subsequent publication will acknowledge first publication in
Echoes of The Right to God online magazine.

8. Eligibility: Contest opens March 15, 2010. Entry deadline is May 15, 2010. Winner will
be announced by June 30, 2010. Immediate family members of the judges and magazine
publishers (Ron and Jennie Dugan) are ineligible to win. No purchase is necessary.

9. Entries may be submitted by email or postal mail. By email, include the essay in the
body of your email. Include your name and contact information.

10. Submit entries to:

 

Email: Echoes (EchoesMagazine@buckeye-express.com)
Include your name and contact information (how you prefer to be contacted).
Include "Echoes" in the subject line.

Postal Mail: Echoes, RTG Books, P.O. Box 1565, Maumee, OH 43537
Include your name and contact information.

Christian
Egalitarian
Committed to 
opening doors to 
God for all people. 
Committed to the 
everyday spirituality 
of everyday people
Contact us:
JennieDugan 
(echoesmagazine@buckeye
-express.com)
P.O. Box 1565 
Maumee, OH 43537

 

PUB: Children's Poetry Contest

WHO: Students who are 6–12 years old & 13–18 years old

 

WHAT: A poetry contest on the theme “Mothers in Nature”

 

WHERE: The Motherhood Muse

Go to http://www.themotherhoodmuse.com .

Click on Contests.

 

WHEN: Deadline is June 1, 2010 (by Midnight EST)

 

WHY: We believe you are the voice of nature and we wish to

hear what you have to say!

 

HOW: It’s a simple 3-step process to enter your poem. See

below for details!

 

 

 

 

Poetry Guidelines:

 Any style

 

 25 lines or less

 

 Theme of poem: Mothers in Nature

 

 Written in English

 

 Single space

 

 Include a Title

 

 

Judging Guidelines:

 Creative and Original

 

 Figurative language (sounds,

imagery)

 

 Message

 

 Readability (rhythm and/or rhyme)

 

 Overall Emotional Impact

 

 Grammar & Punctuation

 

 

Submission Guidelines:

 Complete Poetry Entry Form (Name,

Email, Title of poem (in Message Subject), &

Poem + Your Age (in Enter Your Message)

 

 Deadline: June 1, 2010 (by Midnight

EST)

 

 Winners announced by October 1st

at www.themotherhoodmuse.com

 

Prizes: First Prize in each age group

will receive a prize package worth $50,

Top Five Poems in each age group will

be published in The Motherhood Muse

Children’s Poetry eBook and given a

free copy of the eBook

 

 See Contest Rules below for more

information

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Motherhood Muse Children’s Poetry Contest Rules

 

1. The submitted poem must be the original work of the

student.

 

2. Each student must be between 6 – 18 years old.

 

3.Only one poem per person may be submitted.

 

4. Each student must designate their appropriate age

category.

 

5. Submissions become the property of The Motherhood

Muse and we retain all rights.

 

6. In submitting this poem, you understand the

seriousness of plagiarism and the consequences of

plagiarizing. The entire poem must be written by you

and you alone. Plagiarism is a serious offense, and

your parents and school will be notified if you have

submitted a plagiarized poem.

 

7. If your poem is chosen in the Top Five, we will contact

your parents for permission to print it in The

Motherhood Muse Children’s Poetry eBook.

 

Please send any questions you have to contest@themotherhoodmuse.com

 

THAILAND: Global Voices Online » Thailand: Bloggers document violent clashes

Countries:
Thailand
Topics:
Protest, Politics
Languages:
English

Full Category List

Excerpt

21 dead. 858 injured. These were the casualties during the Saturday violent clash between Red Shirt protesters and soldiers in Thailand. Bloggers were in the middle of the action documenting the bloody encounter. Here are their stories

Post-Thumbnail

No Thumbnail

21 dead. 858 injured.

These were the casualties in yesterday’s violent clash between Red Shirt protesters and soldiers in Thailand. The Red Shirts, which have been protesting in the streets for one month already, want Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva to resign, dissolve the Parliament and call for a new round of elections.

Tony Joh documented the violent clash between protesters and soldiers at Phan Fa bridge.

Tony’s brief narration of the bloody event

Earlier in the day the army had pushed their way into Phan Fa bridge and had forced the protesters back, well this evening the protesters decided to mount a comeback.

At first the situation was relatively calm with the army playing soft soothing music to try and keep the situation peaceful. However that all changed in a split second as gunfire erupted and the crowd attacked with plastic water bottles and bamboo sticks.
The army, outnumbered and perhaps sensing that they were losing control opened fire on the crowd. People ran and ducked for cover as the sound of automatic gunfire range out over the protest site. Soon the protesters were picking up even deadlier weapons and suddenly the army was hit by a barrage of rocks and Molotov cocktails.

The army at this point decided to retreat and surrendered their thanks and armour personnel carriers to the red shirts, who attacked them with sticks and shields.

Nirmal Ghosh was also an eyewitness of the violent clash

The army had bizarrely set up a sound truck which was blasting out '70s disco hits in an attempt to keep the mood light. When I got there they were playing Boney M's “Rasputin.” A local truce was negotiated between a red shirt and the army unit commander.

But red shirts reinforced their fellow protestors in large numbers both at Ratchaprasong and at Rajadamnoen, and by nightfall it seemed inevitable that the army’s push to clear Rajadamnoen and Pan Fah, would go wrong.

The mood at Ratchaprasong where the main red shirt protest is camped was stable and even upbeat. But at Rajadamnoen in the Democracy Monument-Kao San road area, hours of standoffs and some skirmishes erupted into nasty full scale pitched battles with troops shooting directly at red shirts with both rubber and live bullets.

At Khao San road, an area swarming with tourists, violence also erupted

Journotopia's twitter feed is must-read: “Barricades going up at Khao San. Reds preparing for soldiers' return. Several pools of blood on road…. Don't listen to bland Thai govt reassuarances. Khao San is a dangerous place. I've seen 2 tourists with injuries… Khao San lis shuttered up, red shirts everywhere. It looks like a warzone… Pitched battles in streets around Khao San. Tourists ducking for cover. A red shirt with an AK47. Scenes of chaos at Khao San. Tourists tell me they saw horrific inuries, an old man with an eye hanging out.”

A short video clip showing the tense atmosphere at Khao San Road

A reader sent this email to New Mandala. This report describes the impact of the clash between soldiers and protesters.

Walking toward the protest, I noticed that there was a feeling of defiance in the air, but also weariness. All those walking back in the other direction looked extremely tired, and many were covered in grime, if not cuts and bruises. I also noticed here and there individuals (as well as an entire family, children included) who appeared to have “souvenired” some police helmets, riot shields and batons somewhere along the way.

A column of Armoured Personnel Carriers extending into one of the side streets. Swarming all over them were hundreds of red shirts, who were literally tearing them to pieces with their bare hands. Occasionally, they would stop so a middle-class Bangkok family could come and pose in front of the APC’s, perhaps lifting their children up on top for a better shot, but it wasn’t long until the demolitions began again in earnest.

But one didn’t need video evidence to know that violence had taken place there. The doors of all the shop-houses up and down the streets were riddled with the dents of rubber bullets. The streets themselves had been transformed into a mosaic of broken glass, stones and other debris. And then there was the blood

Nicholas Day shares his experience during the commotion. He also gives a clearer characterization of the Red Shirt protesters

Whether the bullets were live or just blanks I do not know. If they were live then they must not have been fired into the crowd in that confined space or a large number of people would have been dead. We did not move back far, we didn’t even get back onto Rajadamern road. People stopped their retreat and stayed on, although maybe at a slightly safer distance than before. People were saying that they were not real bullets. The people who did not move at all were the red-shirt guards who stayed right where they were at the front of their barricade. These guys must either be crazy or very determined and well disciplined, or maybe a bit of both.

I have learnt a few things in these last few hours. One is that tear-gas is really nasty stuff; the other is that the soldiers will need to use a hell of a lot of it to remove the red-shirts from Rajadamnern road.

Bloggers have already posted several pictures of the bloody confrontation in Bangkok. Some soldiers were hostaged by protesters during the encounter. They were released the following day.

After touring the site of confrontation, Thailand's Troubles concludes that soldiers didn't use live rounds in dispersing the crowd

The Prime Minister's claim of troops only shooting into the air with live rounds is incorrect and may be an outright lie. It has yet again been shown that Thai troops are ill-led, ill-equipped and ill-trained for tackling civil unrest without resorting to deadly force. Whether troops mounted their assault with orders to shoot at demonstrators or did so for reasons of personal malice may again never be known. But sending under-trained and poorly-led troops, with little experience of such imbroglios, into a tense and difficult situation with live rounds is a recipe for trouble.

Thai officials wanted protesters to end the rallies which have been hurting the economy, especially the tourism sector. Because of the violent clash, the political standoff is expected to worsen.

============================

SUNDAY, APRIL 11, 2010

April 10, Bangkok

 

The photos here are in the same order as I shot them from about 10am to 2am. Starts with the clash on 
Makkawan Bridge.











 

>via: http://globalvoicesonline.org/2010/04/12/thailand-citizen-videos-of-violent-clash/

 

================================

 

 

 


Countries:
Thailand
Topics:
ProtestPolitics
Languages:
English

The crackdown on the Red Shirt protesters in Thailand last Saturday by the military turned violent killing 21 people and injuring almost 900 individuals. The clash took place in a busy street in Bangkok which allowed bystanders and tourists to document the violence.

Both the soldiers and protesters accuse each other of using real bullets and hand grenades. We may never know who is telling the truth but the videos below allow us to view some of the violent scenes last Saturday.

Via Bangkok Pundit, a brief description of the videos

This video (at the 39 second mark) shows some kind of firefight and then some kind of explosive device (M79 grenade?) landing in the middle of a group of soldiers then soldiers retreating….

…Another video where you can see some guys dressed in dark clothing (red guards? or the third hand Panitan was referring too?) in the distance. At least one has an automatic gun and fires (based on other video of the area from earlier) in the direction of the soldiers.

At Vaitor’s weblog, a tourist who was shot in the arm while documenting the clash

At the moment I just have one working arm/hand to write which is quite annoying, but here are some Pics and Video Footage I took today at the heavy clashes between protesters and the police! Unfortunately I got shot and broke my right arm…

A partial list of names of people killed in Bangkok. Protestersparaded some of the dead in the streets of Bangkok as they vow to continue to push for the resignation of the Prime Minister.

FACT – Freedom Against Censorship Thailand blames all the major political forces for the violence which took place last Saturday

You are all to blame. Violence has never yet solved society’s problems and differences of opinion

We mourn the fallen Reds. We mourn the fallen police and soldiers. We mourn the innocent bystanders caught in the crossfire. Their blood was spilled in vain by the ammart. Only if we really want freedom and democracy will Thai blood mean anything. But if we only have elections to put a new crowd of fatcat dinosaurs into office, and that means Pheu Thai, things will never change in our beloved Thailand.

The soldiers simply obeyed their orders. They did not fire on those who gave the command nor put politicians in their gunsights.

Government spokesmen are now saying that no live rounds were fired at demonstrators. The high toll of dead and injured, including at least two foreign journalists, prove they lie!

Jotman believes the Red Shirts could gain more supporters from the provinces

The cause of the red shirts has been consecrated in blood. The movement now has its martyrs. Red shirts can be expected to arm themselves better in preparation for any future street confrontation. Many more supporters of the rural opposition movement, privy to evidence of the heartless brutality shown by government forces towards visitors to the Thai capital from the countryside, sickened by Bangkok's denials, are bound to step out of the woodwork. Tensions within the Thai armed forces may lead to outright fractures.

Saksith Saiyasombut thinks that the Red Shirts are no longer mere supporters of ousted Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra as the movement is now a loose coalition of forces which want to overthrowthe elitist system of government

What many like to neglect is that the red shirt movement is now more than just a proxy mob of Thaksin, not just a tool of anyone to overthrow the current government. It is a true unavoidable force in Thai politics with legitimate claims, with a sound political consciousness that is now haunting the political elites and bureaucrats for failing to recognize the sign of times. The problems cannot be solely linked back to Thaksin (as he is trying to promote himself as the beacon of freedom and democracy, while there is no doubt that he is not) – it is a collective failure!

A few twitter reactions:

gnarlykitty: @tambourinequeen There were eerier stuff. Smashed cars, confiscated/found bullets/casings, but there were too many people moong-ing.
jfxberns: I'm for elections. I just think that protest -> violence -> dissolution -> new government -> protest is a cycle that needs to be broken.

For background information about the political crisis in Thailand,Topic Thailand summarizes the major issues. Pictures of the violent clash are available in Pantip and Nation’s State.

 
==================

TOPIC: THAILAND

UNDERSTANDING THAILAND’S POLITICAL CRISIS

Resources for learning more

NEWS ANALYSIS

BOOKS ABOUT THAI POLITICS AND SOCIETY

ACADEMIC PAPERS

BLOGS ABOUT THAILAND AND THAI POLITICS

  • New Mandala — “New perspectives on mainland Southeast Asia” from the Australian National University
  • Bangkok Pundit — Thai political analysis from an anonymous blogger
  • Andrew Marshall — British freelance journalist reporting for TIME and other publications.
  • 2Bangkok.com — Web site about life in Thailand and Thai politics

LOCAL ENGLISH-LANGUAGE MEDIA

WIKIPEDIA PAGES

 

>via: http://topicthailand.com/2010/04/09/resources-for-learning-more/

 

Image source: Newley Purnell