Tag: british

December 20, 2013 0

A Tale of Two Protests: Ukraine and Thailand – Part II

By News Desk

Indeed, Thaksin’s "red shirt" mobs had used violence and intimidation to disrupt and shut down an HIV/AIDS awareness march organized by homosexual groups in the northern city of Chiang Mai, a regime stronghold. "Out in Perth" reported in their article, " Chiang Mai Pride Shut Down by Protests as Police Watch On ," that:  Organisers were forced to call off Chiang Mai’s planned second annual Gay Pride Parade on February 21 after harassment from the Rak Chiang Mai 51 political group.  Dressed in their trademark red shirts, members of Rak Chiang Mai 51 locked parade participants into the compound where they were gathering, throwing fruit and rocks and yelling abuse through megaphones.  150 police officers looked on but did nothing to intervene during the four and a half hour stand off.  Fearing escalating violence, organisers eventually called off the parade.  Ginger Norwood from the newly formed Sao-Sao-Et network says the decision to call off the parade was a difficult but necessary one.  ‘The red shirts continued to threaten violence if the parade started and would not leave the blockaded area as long as there was a possibility that the parade might happen,’ she said.‘The inaction of the police further added to the tense situation, because the organisers had no confidence the police would intervene or provide any kind of protection if the red shirt protesters attacked parade goers.’  The action against the Gay Pride Parade had been planned weeks before the event, with Rak Chiang Mai 51 using a local radio station to rally people and driving a truck around the city centre the day before, recruiting people to join their protest. When asked what would happen if march organizers decided to ever hold another legally sanctioned event in Chiang Mai, regime demagogue  Kanyapak (DJ Aom) Maneejak stated :  If in the future they wish to have a parade they can send us their proposal and if we think that it is polite then we will allow it, and even promote it.  Evidently, an already approved event must also be cleared by self-appointed arbiters wearing similar colored shirts who use violence and intimidation to crush opposing views – a tale that should sound sadly familiar as we recall the history of John McCain’s Svoboda friends in Ukraine.  It would appear then, that US Senator John McCain and the rest of the West who embrace the Nazis of Kiev, have decided to oppose the anti-regime protesters in Bangkok because their sort of regime is already in power in Thailand

September 16, 2013 0

Telegraph Parades UK-Coddled Syrian "Defector" in PR Push

By News Desk

Before parroting predictable Western talking points, the Telegraph attempts to flesh out their new character, describing him in their article, " Syria: Assad cannot be trusted on any chemical weapons promises, says his former diplomat ," as: Mr al-Ayoubi is an ethnic Kurd who joined the Syrian diplomatic service in 2001. He came to London as second secretary at the Syrian embassy in February 2011 but was made charge d’affaires in May last year after his predecessor was booted out of the country in response to the massacre committed by Syrian forces in Houla.  The Syrian ambassador, Sami al-Khiyami, had been withdrawn in the March that year.

August 30, 2013 0

Freedom Fries are Out – French Fries and French Toast Back In

By News Desk

Today, the Financial Times warmongers and interventionists whined The Syria vote brings to an end decades of delusion This week’s events will have an impact. They will strengthen a rising US perception that Britain is an ally pulling back from the world. Mr Cameron’s decision to call a referendum on EU membership fits this picture

August 3, 2013 0

‘Why a Robert Mugabe victory would be good for Zimbabwe’

By News Desk

President has proved critics at home and abroad wrong with bold policies now yielding economic freedom Robert Mugabe belongs to a dying breed of politicians on the African continent. Molded in the crucible of politics of nationalism, he emerges as the surviving face of African nationalism radicalised through armed resistance to settler colonialism.