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Posted

TELL IT AS IT IS

A runaway train heading for a total wreck

By Pornpimol Kanchanalak

Published on September 17, 2009

NATIONAL reconciliation for Thailand? What national reconciliation? Nobody is wanting; nobody is willing, nobody is daring. Forget about peace building in the South, where violence and casualties are escalating unabated; we cannot even gain harmony in the City of Angels.

Forget about a judicial system that provides the cornerstone for fair and unprejudiced practice. Forget about bureaucracy being the backbone of governing.

Everything has been "subjectivised" and politicised; everybody seeks patrons because bona fide dispassionate justice, the merit system, and all the right reasons such as honesty and integrity and rewarding a job well done have taken a backseat to connections.

We have forgotten respect, care and the desire to put the national interest front and centre in our behaviour, as well as our set of core beliefs. We have forgotten that corruption is synonymous with stealing, and as such is punishable by law. These days, the corruption bulbs are being sown at the terms of reference level, not even as late as during the bidding process. Why do you think the airport trolleys at Suvarnabhumi Airport look so similar to the shopping carts at Carrefour?

We have forgotten that with authority and rights, there must be responsibilities and accountability. Nowadays, decency and shame apply only to other people. Self-righteousness is a fad that overrides civility and kindness. And forget the foggy idea of creating a new "state" for Thailand. Remember Liberia.

National reconciliation is not rocket science. Go to Google and you will find 2,130,000 such entries. Read some and we will see we are not on any of the reconciliation roads.

Look for one extreme and extraordinary case of success, and we will find Rwanda.

In 1994, Rwanda was a kingdom of death; an impossible nation. The genocide carried out by the majority Hutu tribe claimed almost a million lives among the Tutsi minority. Today, Rwanda is one of the safest and most orderly countries in Africa, with its per-capita gross domestic product almost tripled. Tourism is a boom industry, foreign direct investment has poured in. One man - the 51-year-old President Paul Kagame - was all that the country needed to heal itself.

Kagame came to power after an armed rebellion. As a Tutsi who is often accused of being a Hutu sympathiser, Kagame, once in office, put national reconciliation and reintegration of the two warring tribes as the topmost priority on his country's agenda. It has not been easy, it is far from being perfect, and it did not happen instantly; but the day he took office, the road to mending his country's vicious divisive wounds was flung open. Fifteen years on, Hutu former killers live peacefully among the Tutsi they once slaughtered with such glee and exhilaration that reading about it makes your hair stand on end.

If a country that represents the most frightening challenge to any national appeasement effort has managed to come this far and achieve this much, shouldn't it give reason for us to pause for thought about ourselves? Why do we have to continue ripping each other apart at any and all cost, at any opportunity, instead of thinking about how to bring a peaceful end to our petulant national disposition?

Talk to anybody who can still think relatively clearly or who is colour-blind, politically, and we can hardly find anybody who thinks the country is going in the direction of conflict-resolution to address the political rifts that gets deeper by the day. Talk to them. You will find no one who is not worried, not weary. But nothing is being done in any meaningful way to stop this train wreck.

Anger, hatred, revenge, double standards, disillusionment and resignation are the conductors of our national locomotive. "Wait until it's my turn" and "go for broke" are the mantras of those who are aggrieved or mistreated - in reality or in their own perception. People seem to have gladly taken the Bush dichotomy, "either you are with us, or you are with them" all the way to the "enemy combatant". And with this, the road gets more treacherous.

It's about time our leadership put reconciliation at the top of our country's "must do" list. Set up a National Reconciliation Commission, find someone with the wisdom, credibility, integrity and impartiality to head the body, and give them the legal authority, legal means and protection to shield them from devious political arm-twisting and interference, and from unsavoury reprisal.

These days, judging from the way people treat their "adversaries" and settle their scores, we should call any qualified body that is willing to take on this assignment a hero. But we must believe that there are some brave and capable souls out there to do this job right.

Meanwhile, everybody, we must stop demonising people with whom we disagree and who we dislike, even those we personally and morally find repulsive. Stop thinking "personal", think "national", for a change, so the healing process can begin. With the way things are, we hold all the losing options, and not a single winning one. So what do we have to lose?

The September 19 rally will come and go. There will be more. We have waited too long, wasted too much time, expended too much energy and too many resources pursuing a witch-hunt and heaping up retribution. If everybody insists on being in the right, soon nothing will be left. The country may have already been decimated before we come to our senses to ask ourselves, "What for?"

Are we that carnivorous and self-destructive?

nationlogo.jpg

-- The Nation 17-09-09

Ref url:- http://nationmultimedia.com/2009/09/17/opi...on_30112384.php

There is a shortened inclusion of words from the song Runaway Train at the end, but I,ve left it out.

marshbags

The country is going / has gone :)

Posted

Marshbags: at the risk of seeming like a doomsayer, I agree. I have reluctantly and regretfully come to the conclusion that this country is finished, it lacks the resolve and the ability to make meaningful change. It is already a failed state.

Tragic but true. The elephant is dead already, but has yet to fall down. The next 5 years will not be pretty.

Posted
Marshbags: at the risk of seeming like a doomsayer, I agree. I have reluctantly and regretfully come to the conclusion that this country is finished, it lacks the resolve and the ability to make meaningful change. It is already a failed state.

Tragic but true. The elephant is dead already, but has yet to fall down. The next 5 years will not be pretty.

This is another sign of selfishness within Thai society. Everyone is thinking of their own benefit and do not care about the Country s whole. I have seen this many times since I have been living over her for past 3 years. The best example is the way Thai people drive, nothing except their car matters and they will not yield to anyone else while driving.

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