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  • OPINION

    The faux democracy that Prayut may build

    News, Surasak Glahan, Published on 19/09/2018

    » When building a house, hiring a contractor whose credentials are more about demolishing structures than building new ones could turn into a nightmare. You could hardly blame such an inexperienced contractor if your house collapsed.

  • OPINION

    An academic shift right will hurt society

    News, Surasak Glahan, Published on 31/01/2018

    » Part of me wishes the military government had been behind the recent ban on the publication of the results of a poll by the National Institute of Development Administration (Nida). Such state intimidation is not a good thing. But at least it's better than the reality -- self-censorship imposed by Nida's president or, put it another way, his preferred choice to not let public opinion influence an ongoing probe against one of the regime's top men.

  • OPINION

    Let's hear it for the year's real heroes

    News, Surasak Glahan, Published on 25/12/2017

    » With the constant chilly breeze in the evening and nice temperatures during the day, the cold spell this year has been more generous to Bangkokians than the increasingly suppressive political climate (We have been through many rounds of political turmoil for years, but had rarely experienced this kind of pleasant winter.)

  • OPINION

    Rights claims fall flat amid cadet scandal

    News, Surasak Glahan, Published on 27/11/2017

    » Actions did speak much louder than words last week. The government on Tuesday announced its new national human rights agenda for government agencies. It didn't generate any news buzz. Over the following days, the government's top brass publicly endorsed the military's culture of corporal punishment, which allegedly involves rights violations, in the wake of the death of a military cadet. Their endorsement generated national news.

  • OPINION

    Regime's extreme laws won't cure problems

    News, Surasak Glahan, Published on 03/08/2017

    » Living in Thailand nowadays requires that we keep ourselves updated on new laws and new (and double?) standards of law enforcement, otherwise we may find ourselves in trouble.

  • OPINION

    Govt 'victories' become our nightmares

    News, Surasak Glahan, Published on 27/05/2017

    » Being overly critical of the National Council for Peace and Order (NCPO) may not help if you want to be in a state of sanity while gauging its three-year performance and trying to understand why the regime and its cheerleaders still think it has done a great job and should prolong its stay in power.

  • OPINION

    Activist celebrates rights award ... in jail

    News, Surasak Glahan, Published on 18/05/2017

    » As our dear military government busily prepares itself to boast next Monday about its achievements during the past three years on the anniversary of its seizing power, the parents of jailed student activist Jatupat "Pai Dao Din" Boonpattararaksa will today pick up the prestigious 2017 Gwangju Prize for Human Rights award on behalf of their son in South Korea.

  • OPINION

    Consult public before passing laws

    News, Surasak Glahan, Published on 18/08/2016

    » There have been signs of relief and calls for healing from some quarters of society in the aftermath of the constitutional referendum. Now that the charter, which proposes a "half-baked democracy" that Thailand had 40 years ago, has sailed through, it seems like many of us can't wait for a new beginning.

  • OPINION

    Voters in the dark about reform 'changes'

    News, Surasak Glahan, Published on 06/08/2016

    » Reform has become the buzz-word in the context of pre- and post-2014 coup Thailand. First, the defunct People's Democratic Reform Committee made a demand for national reform before elections. Since the military staged the coup, national reform has also been part of the key agenda of the National Council for Peace and Order (NCPO). Now, the draft constitution that will be decided at the referendum tomorrow promises national reform as part of its key elements.

  • OPINION

    Forced to wed a mysterious charter bride

    News, Surasak Glahan, Published on 14/07/2016

    » At the beginning of a relationship, an unknown or ambiguous thing about a person whom we are attracted to usually excites us. Once the relationship gets more serious, we usually need to know the unknown and understand the ambiguity before committing ourselves further, let's say, to a marriage.

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