Friday, 13 April 2012

Timeline / Thailand

Timeline / Thailand



A chronology of key events:

Thai Royal navy oarsmen in acient warrior costume row the Royal barge on the Chao Phraya river during the Royal celebrations in 2007
Thai Royal navy oarsmen in acient warrior costume


1782 - Beginning of the Chakri dynasty under King Rama I, which rules to this present day. The country is known as Siam. New capital of Bangkok founded.


1868-1910 - Reign of King Chulalongkorn. Employment of Western advisers to modernise Siam's administration and commerce. Railway network developed.


1917 - Siam becomes ally of Great Britain in World War I.


1932 - Bloodless coup against absolute monarch King Prajadhipok. Constitutional monarchy introduced with parliamentary government.


1939 - Siam changes its name to Thailand ("Land of the Free").


1941 - Japanese forces land. After negotiations Thailand allows Japanese to advance towards British-controlled Malay Peninsula, Singapore and Burma.


1942 - Thailand declares war on Britain and US, but Thai ambassador in Washington refuses to deliver declaration to US government.



Post-war uncertainty


1945 - End of World War II. Thailand compelled to return territory it had seized from Laos, Cambodia and Malaya. Exiled King Ananda returns.

 

Capital: Bangkok


A Thai Buddhist monk rides a ferry on Bangkok's Chao Phraya river
Bangkok, known as "Krung Thep" - City of Angels
  • Population: 7.2 million
  • Original settlement established by Chinese traders
  • Became capital of Kingdom of Siam in 1782

1946 - King Ananda assassinated.


1947 - Military coup by the wartime, pro-Japanese leader Phibun Songkhram. The military retain power until 1973.


1965 onwards - Thailand permits US to use bases there during the Vietnam War. Thai troops fight in South Vietnam.



Short-lived civilian rule


1973 - Student riots in Bangkok bring about the fall of the military government. Free elections are held but the resulting governments lack stability.


1976 - Military takes over again.


1978 - New constitution promulgated.


1980 - General Prem Tinsulanonda assumes power.


1983 - Prem gives up his military position and heads a civilian government. He is re-elected in 1986.


1988 - General Chatichai Choonhaven replaces Prem after elections.


1991 - Military coup, the 17th since 1932. A civilian, Anand Panyarachun, is installed as prime minister.

 

Temples


Wat Phrathat Doi Suthep temple
Wat Phrathat Doi Suthep temple is located near northern city of Chiang Mai


1992 - New elections in March replace Anand with General Suchinda Kraprayoon. There are demonstrations against him, forcing him to resign. Anand is re-instated temporarily. Elections in September see Chuan Leekpai, leader of the Democratic Party, chosen as prime minister.


1995 - Government collapses. Banharn Silpa-archa, of the Thai Nation party, elected prime minister.

1996 - Banharn's government resigns, accused of corruption. Chavalit Yongchaiyudh of the New Aspiration party wins elections.



Financial turmoil


1997 - Asian financial crisis: The baht falls sharply against the dollar, leading to bankruptcies and unemployment. The IMF steps in. Chuan Leekpai becomes prime minister.


1998 - Tens of thousands of migrant workers are sent back to their countries of origin. Chuan involves the opposition in his government in order to push through economic reforms.


1999 - Economy begins to pick up again. Thai media highlight high cost of drug treatments for Aids and HIV. Thailand begins to pressurise drugs companies to find ways to make the drugs cheaper.

 

Drugs


Eradication of opium
Thousands were killed in controversial anti-drug drive


2001 January - Elections won by Thaksin Shinawatra of new Thai Love Thai party. Allegations of vote-buying force partial re-run of poll. Thaksin forms coalition government.


2001 March - A plane Thaksin is due to board explodes. Police say a bomb is to blame.


2001 June - Prime Minister Thaksin visits Burma to discuss drugs and border tensions. He says relations are now back on track. Within days the Mae Sai-Tachilek border crossing is opened again after clashes between Thai and Burmese troops in February.


2001 August - Thaksin is cleared of assets concealment. A conviction by the Thai Constitutional Court could have meant a five-year ban from politics.


2002 May- Burma closes border with Thailand after Thai army fires shells into Burma during battle between Burmese army and ethnic Shan rebels. Border reopens in October.



Temple row


2003 January - Serious diplomatic upset with Cambodia over comments attributed to a Thai actress that Cambodia's Angkor Wat temple complex was stolen from Thailand. Angry crowds attack the Thai embassy in the Cambodian capital. More than 500 Thai nationals are evacuated.


2003 February - Controversial crackdown on drugs starts; more than 2,000 suspects are killed by late April. The government blames many killings on criminal gangs; rights groups say extra-judicial killings were encouraged by the authorities.


2004 January-March - More than 100 are killed in a wave of attacks in the largely-Muslim south. The government blames Islamic militants. Martial law is imposed.


2004 April - More than 100 suspected Islamic insurgents are killed after launching coordinated dawn attacks on police bases in the south.


Flowers next to placards bearing the names of victims of the 2004 tsunami on the resort island of Phuket Half of the tsunami victims in Thailand were foreign tourists


2004 October - 85 Muslim protesters die, many from suffocation, while in army custody following violence at a rally in the south. An enquiry concludes that they were not killed deliberately.



Tsunami


2004 December- Thousands of people are killed when massive waves, caused by a powerful undersea earthquake off the Indonesian coast, devastate communities on the south-west coast, including the resort of Phuket.


2005 March - Thaksin Shinawatra begins a second term as PM after his party wins February's elections by a landslide.


2005 July - As violent unrest continues in the south, Prime Minister Thaksin is given new powers to counter suspected Muslim militants in the region. In November the death toll in violence since January 2004 tops 1,000.


2005 October - Thailand redoubles efforts to fight bird flu as fresh outbreaks of the disease are reported.


2006 April-May - Snap election, called by the PM amid mass rallies against him, is boycotted by the opposition and is subsequently annulled, leaving a political vacuum. The PM takes a seven-week break from politics.


2006 August - Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra accuses several army officers of plotting to kill him after police find a car containing bomb-making materials near his house.


2006 September - Six simultaneous motorcycle bombs kill three people and wound more than 60 on a busy street in the southern town of Hat Yai.



Coup


2006 19 September- Military leaders stage a bloodless coup while Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra is at the UN General Assembly. Retired General Surayud Chulanont is appointed as interim prime minister in October.

 

Hero for a time

Thaksin Shinawatra
Policeman-turned-tycoon Thaksin Shinawatra transformed Thai politics but was ousted in a military coup


2006 31 December- Series of bomb blasts in Bangkok kills three people. No-one claims responsibility.


2007 January - Martial law is lifted in more than half of the country.


2007 April - First draft of a new constitution is approved by a committee appointed by the military administration.


2007 May - Ousted prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra's Thai Rak Thai party is banned. Thousands of soldiers are put on alert.


2007 August- Voters in a referendum approve a new, military-drafted constitution.



Democracy restored


2007 December- General elections mark the first major step towards a return to civilian rule. The People Power Party (PPP), seen as the reincarnation of Thaksin's Thai Rak Thai (Thais Love Thais) party, wins the most votes.


2008 January- An elected parliament convenes for the first time since the military seized power in September 2006.


Corruption trial of Pojaman Shinawatra, the wife of former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra, begins two weeks after her return from exile.


2008 February - Return to civilian rule. Samak Sundaravej is sworn in as prime minister.

Ousted premier Thaksin Shinawatra returns from exile.


2008 July - Thaksin Shinawatra's corruption trial begins.

 

Temple row


Cambodian soldiers patrol past the Preah Vihear temple near the Thai border
The Preah Vihear temple sparked a border standoff with Cambodia


Thaksin's wife is found guilty of fraud and sentenced to three years in jail. She is granted bail pending an appeal.

Cambodia and Thailand move troops to disputed land near ancient Preah Vihear temple after decision to list it as UN World Heritage Site fans nationalist emotions on both sides. Officials from both states start talks to resolve standoff.


2008 August - Thaksin flees to Britain with his family after failing to appear in court to face corruption charges.



Unrest


2008 September - State of emergency declared in Bangkok after thousands of pro- and anti-government demonstrators clash in the city. The clashes followed a week of mass protests calling for the resignation of Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej, and the occupation by protesters of Bangkok's main government complex.

Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej dismissed by Constitutional Court for violating a conflict of interest law by hosting two television cooking shows while in office.

Somchai Wongsawat chosen by parliament as new prime minister, but the street protests against the government continue.


2008 October - Sixteen killed and hundreds injured in Thailand's worst anti-government protests in 16 years.

Thai troops shoot dead two Cambodian soldiers in an exchange of fire on the disputed stretch of the two countries' border, near the Preah Vihear temple.

Thai Supreme Court gives fugitive former PM Thaksin Shinawatra a two-year jail sentence after finding him guilty of corruption over a land deal.

 

 

Protest politics


Red-shirt protesters
Thailand's polarised politics has led to waves of mass protest


2008 November - Opposition People's Alliance for Democracy rallies tens of thousands for protest around parliament building in Bangkok in "final battle" to topple the government.

Flights from Thailand's main airports are suspended after anti-government protesters blockade terminal buildings. Thousands of foreign visitors are left stranded.



Another new PM


2008 December - Prime Minister Somchai Wongsawat is forced from office by a Constitutional Court ruling disbanding the governing People Power Party for electoral fraud and barring its leaders from politics for five years.

Opposition leader Abhisit Vejjajiva secures a coalition within parliament to become Thailand's new prime minister, the third new leader in three months.


2009 March-April - Supporters of former PM Thaksin Shinawatra hold mass rallies against the government's economic policies.


2009 April - Continuing unrest forces the cancellation of an ASEAN summit after anti-government protesters storm the summit venue in the resort of Pattaya.

PM Abhisit Vejjajiva declares a state of emergency and moves troops into Bangkok to end an opposition protest sit-in. Over 120 people injured in resulting clashes. Emergency lifted on 24 April.


2009 June - The Thai army denies possibility for an attack on a mosque in Narathiwat in the south, in which at least 10 people died. Most observers accused Islamist militants, but some locals suspect army involvement.

Leaders of the protest group that helped topple Thaksin Shinawatra apply to register themselves as the New Politics Party.


2009 July - Thailand sends heavily-armed troops to reinforce positions along the Burmese border after an influx of thousands of ethnic Karen refugees fleeing a Burmese army offensive.


2009 July-September - Thousands of pro- and anti-Thaksin protestors hold regular rallies in Bangkok and elsewhere.

 

Hmong expulsion

An Ethnic Hmong refugee sits inside a police truck during the operation to deport thousands of Hmong to Laos
The UN voiced concern about the fate of Hmong repatriated from Thailand


2009 November - Row with Cambodia grows over the appointment of Thaksin Shinawatra as an economic adviser to the Cambodian government. Cambodia takes over Thai-owned air traffic control firm.


2009 December - Up to 20,000 Thaksin supporters rally in Bangkok to demand fresh elections. Mr Thaksin addressed them by video-link.

Thailand deports about 4,000 ethnic Hmong back to communist-ruled Laos, deeming them to be economic migrants. The UN and US expressed concern about their possible reception in Laos.


2010 January - Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva says Thailand hopes to see 4% growth in 2010.


2010 February - Thailand drops charges against mainly Kazakh and Belarusian crew of a plane suspected of carrying weapons from North Korea.

Supreme Court strips Mr Thaksin's family of half of its wealth after ruling that he illegally acquired $1.4bn during his time as PM. Security forces placed on high alert amid fear of clashes with Thaksin supporters.



Red Shirts


2010 March-May - Tens of thousands of pro-Thaksin opposition protesters - in trademark red shirts - paralyse parts of central Bangkok for two months to demand PM Abhisit's resignation and early elections; after negotiations fail, troops storm the protesters' barricades and end the demonstrations. Death toll from Thailand's worst political violence in modern history put at 91.


2010 August - Thailand resumes diplomatic ties with Cambodia after Phnom Penh announced the resignation of oustde Thai PM Thaksin Shinawatra as its economic advisor.


2010 November - Thailand extradites Russian national Viktor Bout to the US on charges of arms dealing, after months of legal wrangling. Russia says the move is a "glaring injustice" and politically motivated.


2011 January - Cambodia brings espionage charges against two Thai citizens arrested after crossing the countries' disputed border in December. "Yellow-shirt" nationalists protest in Bangkok against the government's handling of the border row.


2011 February - Thai and Cambodian forces exchange fire across the disputed border area near the Preah Vihear temple. Both sides agree to allow Indonesian monitors to prevent further clashes.


'Red Shirt' supporters of fugitive former leader Thaksin Shinawatra and his sister Yingluck Shinawatra
Sister of fugitive former leader Thaksin Shinawatra, Yingluck, was elected Thailand's first female prime minister


In a surprise move the government releases seven leaders of the red-shirt movement on bail after nine months in jail after last spring's protests. Scores of supporters remain in prison.

2011 April - Fighting breaks out for severals running between Cambodian and Thai forces across the border near two disputed Hindu temples of Ta Moan and Ta Krabey, later spreading to area of Preah Vihear temple.


2011 May - Talks between the Cambodian and Thai prime ministers fail to resolve border dispute.



Election sweep


2011 July - Elections. Yingluck Shinawatra becomes prime minister.


2011 November - Floods kill hundreds, engulf outskirts of Bangkok.


2012 February - Bomb blasts in Bangkok thought to target Israeli diplomats.


http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/

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