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Thailand's Longest serving Monarch
Hospitalised - September 22nd
2009
King Bhumibol Adulyadej
of Thailand, the world’s longest-reigning monarch and the
object of intense devotion for many Thais, has spent a third
night in hospital, underlining the atmosphere of crisis and
division in the country.
Doctors
said that the the condition of the King, 81, had improved since
Saturday, when he was put on antibiotics and an intravenous
drip after suffering fever, tiredness and loss of appetite. “In
the past 24 hours His Majesty has less fever but he still has a
loss of appetite,” the royal household bureau said in a
statement read out on national television. “The medical team is
still giving him antibiotics and nutrients.”
The
King’s indisposition, after some of the most tumultuous and
chaotic months in modern Thai history, is a reminder of the
degree to which the country’s stability depends on his
continuing survival - and of the uncertainty that is likely to
follow his death.
King
Bhumibol’s illness came at the end of a tense day in Thailand,
and after three years of bitter division, conflict and
political instability. On Saturday, tens of thousands of
supporters of the deposed former prime minister, Thaksin
Shinawatra, marched through Bangkok to mark the third
anniversary of the military coup that ejected him from
power.
“Three
years after the coup, our country has slid backwards,” Mr
Thaksin told supporters of the “Red Shirt” movement, the United
Front for Democracy against Dictatorship (UDD), via a videolink
from his exile in an unidentified foreign country. “There is no
justice in society. The longer this government stays, the
bigger the disaster is for the country. Give me just six months
as prime minister, and I will bring this country back to
normal.”
Meanwhile, members of the People’s Alliance for
Democracy, who oppose Mr Thaksin, mounted a violent display of
nationalist fervour at a Buddhist temple on a disputed area of
border with Cambodia. Dozens of people were injured, after the
“Yellow Shirts” fought with Thai police and local
villagers.
Abhisit
Vejjajiva, the Prime MInister, visited the Siriraj Hospital in
Bangkok over the weekend to offer wishes for the King’s
recovery, and assured Thais that the treatment was routine.
“His Majesty's condition is not a problem,” he said. There is
no reason to doubt this, but the timing of the King’s illness
is bound to provoke anxiety among Thais.
In the
past few years millions of Thais have taken to dressing in
yellow, the royal colour, in honour of the King. Thai towns and
cities display posters of Bhumibol and his Queen, Sirikit,
every few hundred yards. Along with his family, he is protected
by a harsh l?se
majest? law which
punishes any perceived insult to the monarchy. A female
opposition activist was sentenced last month to 18 years in
prison for this crime.
Bhumibol
is also respected for his occasional, but influential,
interventions in Thai politics when he has forced compromise
between squabbling politicians and appealed for national
unity.
His son,
the Crown Prince Maha Vajiralongkorn, has been married three
times and in the past two years scandalous film footage has
been distributed on the Internet and on clandestine CDs,
featuring him and his current wife, Princess
Srirasmi.
An
Australian writer, Harry Nicolaides, spent five months in
prison for a novel thaty referred to the romantic entanglements
and intrigues of the Crown Prince, before he received a royal
pardon. A biography of Bhumibol by the American writer, Paul
Handley, which also touches on the taboo subject, is denied
distribution in Thailand.
Times Online
September 22, 2009
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