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Thailand turmoil shuts down scores of businesses

Fri Apr 23, 2010 2:40 PM EDT
world-news, business, thailand, closed, as-thailand, for-business
Jocelyn Gecker, Associated Press
< PreviousNext >
showing 1 of 3 photos
<p>A Thai riot policeman passes by a Thai man sitting in front of a closed business Friday April 23, 2010 near the site of an explosion the night before in Bangkok, Thailand. Everything from yoga studios to luxury hotels, shopping malls and office buildings have closed as Thailand's political turmoil enters a seventh week and it becomes clear that business cannot flourish in a battlefield.(AP Photo/David Guttenfelder)</p>

A Thai riot policeman passes by a Thai man sitting in front of a closed business Friday April 23, 2010 near the site of an explosion the night before in Bangkok, Thailand. Everything from yoga studios to luxury hotels, shopping malls and office buildings have closed as Thailand's political turmoil enters a seventh week and it becomes clear that business cannot flourish in a battlefield.(AP Photo/David Guttenfelder)

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BANGKOK — Yoga studios have canceled classes. Luxury hotels are turning away guests. Shopping malls and office buildings are shut down.

As Thailand's political turmoil enters its seventh week, the economic toll is spreading. Ordinary workers, parents and shoppers often reach their destinations to find signs that say: "Sorry, closed due to political unrest."

The "Red Shirt" protesters have occupied various parts of Bangkok since March 12 to demand the government's resignation. Twenty-six people have died in the political violence.

The protests are concentrated now in about a square mile of the Thai capital. In early April, protesters pitched tents along the city's swankiest shopping street — the equivalent of Paris' Champs-Elysees or New York's Fifth Avenue.

Thousands of supporters have slept on sidewalks ever since. Four luxury hotels and a half-dozen towering shopping malls in the area have closed, losing millions of dollars a day.

The latest casualty is nearby Silom Road, the city's financial district, which transforms after-hours into a nighttime bazaar with a popular bar scene, notably the lewd kind for which Bangkok is infamous.

On Friday, Silom was filled with riot police, and many of its banks, restaurants, offices and a major shopping complex were shut after a night of bloody chaos that resulted in one death and more than 80 people wounded.

Clashes on April 10 left 25 dead and more than 800 hurt, damaging Thailand's image as a tourist paradise.

"I still can't believe it," said Somchay Chaitosa, a bank employee whose bank was one of many in the Silom area that closed Friday. "This is like in the movies that we watch of civil wars and shootings in Africa, but it happened right here in the heart of Bangkok."

Five grenade explosions on Thursday blasted holes through the roof of an elevated Skytrain station and shattered cafe windows near the landmark Dusit Thani hotel. Authorities immediately closed the elevated rail line that runs down Silom. The trains serve thousands of daily commuters, but the station has also been an overhead bunker for soldiers to monitor protesters.

The soldiers were sent there Monday to keep the protesters from spilling onto Silom. Adding to the volatile mix are rival demonstrators hurling insults and bottles at the Red Shirts, who have barricaded themselves behind a wall of tires and homemade bamboo spears.

The Red Shirts claim a noble cause, demanding greater equality in Thai society and characterizing their movement as a class struggle pitting the country's vast rural poor against an elite that has traditionally held power. They claim Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva gained power illegitimately and should step aside so new elections can be held.

But more and more Bangkok residents say they are fed up with the Red Shirts, the violence and the ongoing damage to Thailand's image.

Tourism accounts for 6 percent of the country's economy and has steeply declined since the protests started.

Cancelations are pouring in from tourists and business travelers. Thailand has already lost more than $31 million (1 billion baht) from event cancellations and is projected to lose several times that in coming months, according to the Thailand Convention and Exhibition Bureau.

The stock market has tumbled 7 percent since just before the violence erupted. The Thai stock exchange says 34 listed companies that had planned annual shareholder meetings in the city have changed their plans because of safety concerns.

"Don't say this is a fight for democracy. What they are doing is terrorism," said Sangrawee Tapananon, 55, a bank employee who says she felt compelled to join the anti-Red protests. "My family has begged me not to join the protests. But if we don't come out, it means we succumb to the thugs."

The Bangkok Post ran a graphic Friday with seven tips for businesses to prepare for emergencies, including rehearsing evacuations and training staff in first aid.

Most of Bangkok remains untouched, but the violence has rippled into life beyond the protest zone.

Several international schools, all outside the protest area, have closed periodically since the rallies started. Some of the city's biggest gyms are in the shopping malls and streets near the Rajprasong shopping area.

The website for Absolute Yoga, a popular Bangkok yoga studio, apologizes to customers for the closure of its biggest branch. "Due to the ongoing political unrest ... our studio will remain closed until the situation is clear."

The sprawling Royal Bangkok Sport Club, a green oasis for the elite adjacent to the "occupation zone," closed Friday as a security precaution, but may reopen Monday.

"This demonstration has changed my way of life," said Apiruedee Apiwattanaporn, 29, a financial officer and gym buff who now has nowhere to work out. "My gym shut down, so I went to another branch at Silom, but now the Skytrain station at Silom is closed."

"My favorite restaurants are closed and so are my hair and nail salons," she said. Instead, she has turned to her hobby — photography. "I go take pictures of the Red Shirts these days."

___

Associated Press Writer Thanyarat Doksone contributed to this report.

© 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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  • Public Discussion (17)
rule the world

And I leave for Thailand in May.......... I hope all of this works out before then.

  • 1 vote
Reply#1 - Fri Apr 23, 2010 3:28 PM EDT
River-239955

Oh no... It might very well turn out to be quite the adventure. Would your trip be postponed or cancelled if conditions are not improved?

  • 1 vote
#1.1 - Fri Apr 23, 2010 3:58 PM EDT
Reply
Linda Luke

Governments every where have the same problem. They need to fix poverty and allow people to live their lives.

  • 1 vote
Reply#2 - Fri Apr 23, 2010 4:28 PM EDT
MRZK.COM

"My favorite restaurants are closed and so are my hair and nail salons," my, my, they are becoming westernized consumers.

The main point to be noted here is that many of the people of Thailand still have the balls to do what they need to to remove their worthless, illegally appointed Prime Minister (note very little of the article discussed the real reason for the action). The Philippines has done this twice as well. If the working people of this country not stood for Bush so long we would not have two wars, a Supreme Court that thinks corporations are human and the bailouts of AIG, et al.

  • 2 votes
Reply#3 - Fri Apr 23, 2010 4:37 PM EDT
rule the world

You can't fix poverty. Not all people are equal, never have been, never will be. But we in the USA (poor or rich) all have the same opportunity to excel and succeed and move out of poverty.

  • 1 vote
#3.1 - Fri Apr 23, 2010 8:21 PM EDT
River-239955

But we in the USA (poor or rich) all have the same opportunity to excel and succeed and move out of poverty.

That is sssssooooooo not true. I can see how some have come to believe it, though.

  • 1 vote
#3.2 - Fri Apr 23, 2010 8:37 PM EDT
rule the world

How is that not true?

  • 1 vote
#3.3 - Fri Apr 23, 2010 9:09 PM EDT
River-239955

I've lived in America all my life, and I simply know better. Not going to go into all the details just yet, because there is quite a bit that is not ready for publication, but I can and will say for a fact that civil rights have a very, very long way to go here.

  • 1 vote
#3.4 - Fri Apr 23, 2010 9:13 PM EDT
rule the world

Any man be they black or white or any other race can get a free lower and higher education in this country. That same man can rise from being a janitor to being CEO. In only this country is that even a possibility. Anyone that thinks differently is lost because they can not see the truth about how great this country really is. No offense but you must be a liberal or Democrat with your thinking. I do apologize for bringing politics into this but you are very wrong thinking that most or all of the poor can not rise above their poverty. Most times they don't want to or have parents that don't want them in the first place so they are less likely to do what it will take to succeed in life.

  • 1 vote
#3.5 - Fri Apr 23, 2010 9:30 PM EDT
River-239955

A "sucessful life" comes in many, many forms....not just the white man's definition. :)

  • 1 vote
#3.6 - Fri Apr 23, 2010 9:37 PM EDT
rule the world

So what is the "white man's" definition of success?

  • 1 vote
#3.7 - Fri Apr 23, 2010 9:42 PM EDT
River-239955

Hm...... Since I am not a white man, perhaps it is best if I don't try to identify with his ideals. I do know that I do not uphold his ideals, and have dreams that reach far above and beyond anything that he ever imagined.

Now....let's look at your post #3.5......

Any man be they black or white or any other race

I am not a man. I am not black. I am not white.

can get a free lower and higher education in this country.

No, an affordable higher education was not available to me.

That same man can rise from being a janitor to being CEO.

Where I come from, there are but a handful of janitors and no CEO's at all.

In only this country is that even a possibility. Anyone that thinks differently is lost because they can not see the truth about how great this country really is.

Don't assume that you are aware of what I have seen.

No offense but you must be a liberal or Democrat with your thinking.

I am an American who does not know or respect the simple-minded boundaries of American politics.

I do apologize for bringing politics into this but you are very wrong thinking that most or all of the poor can not rise above their poverty.

No apologies necessary. That is what men do. It is also what will take them down. No. I am not "wrong" in the way I think. In fact, I have never in my life been more committed to what I think, because I know that I am doing the right thing, and I need no man's approval to get it done.

Most times they don't want to or have parents that don't want them in the first place so they are less likely to do what it will take to succeed in life.

You'll do yourself a big favor by not taking cheap shots at things a person has little control over and that you have zero knowledge of.

  • 1 vote
#3.8 - Fri Apr 23, 2010 10:05 PM EDT
rule the world

I taught myself calculus when I was not able to take it in high school. Made an A in all 3 calculus courses in college. I also taught myself linear algebra and matrices as well as tensor mathematics, and a few structural engineering courses and flight/orbital mechanics courses (things I was interested in other then my major of Nuclear Engineering). Any one can get a free education. Go to the library. Just because you might not be able to get the degree does not mean you can not educate yourself.

"man" refers to all men (men and women) I hate english, not sure what that is termed in english.

Where you come from has no bearing on where you can go, that is why we are free, unless you think we have apartheid here!

I never assumed anything about who you are or what you have seen.

    #3.9 - Fri Apr 23, 2010 10:16 PM EDT
    River-239955

    Where you come from has no bearing on where you can go,

    THAT I can agree with. :)

    "man" refers to all men (men and women) I hate english, not sure what that is termed in english.

    Lol.... What is your native language, if I can ask?

    I am much more educated than many, in fact, but in America it is not considered valuable without a degree. I laughed at the thought of the library, because there was not one where I was, but that was fine. I still managed to absorb and learn many great things, holding knowledge and wisdom close to my heart.

    • 1 vote
    #3.10 - Fri Apr 23, 2010 10:23 PM EDT
    rule the world

    English. I hate the english language. That is why I went into Engineering.

    • 1 vote
    #3.11 - Fri Apr 23, 2010 10:27 PM EDT
    River-239955

    Engineering is in a different language? I'm puzzled.

    I don't enjoy English so much anymore, myself, and have taken up another language. Those who speak American English seem to be much like magpies more and more often, squawking the same old useless nonsense. And the vulgarities !!! I would so love to land right in the middle of a foreign country where I didn't understand the bitter hatred and mindless meanness such as what I witness here so much.

    Oops.... We have wandered way off topic from the article. :)

    • 1 vote
    #3.12 - Fri Apr 23, 2010 10:31 PM EDT
    rule the world

    You are obviously not from the USA. And no engineering is in english and all other languages. You obviously do not understand what I was trying to see. c ya.

      #3.13 - Fri Apr 23, 2010 10:47 PM EDT
      Reply
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