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Pkv
15-08-05, 03:47 PM
Man, must I be ignorant or what, but...

Is Thailand/Bangkok holding events to mark the 6oth Anniversary of the war in the Far East/Pacific?

From the BBC:

In Japan, Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi said his nation felt "deep remorse" for the aggression shown towards its neighbours during the war.

Commemorative services are also taking place in other Asian nations.

But across the region, many still feel that Japan has yet to fully face up to, and atone for, its wartime actions.

The war in the Pacific, which finally ended on 15 August 1945, killed millions of people from the jungles of Burma and the beaches of Singapore and the Philippines, to the cities of China and Japan and the seas of the Pacific.

Japan has been heavily criticised for the brutality of its soldiers in the countries it annexed during the war - and especially for its treatment of civilians in China.

'Terrible lessons'

In a written statement, Mr Koizumi admitted on Monday that Japan had "caused great damages and pain to people in many countries, especially our Asian neighbours, through colonization and invasion.

"We will not forget the terrible lessons of the war, and will contribute to world peace and prosperity," he said.

Shortly afterwards, Mr Koizumi joined Emperor Akihito and Empress Michiko for a nationally televised service.

They bowed deeply before a memorial to the country's war dead that had been set up on a white stage.

Exactly 60 years after Emperor Hirohito formally surrendered, asking his people to "bear the unbearable" and accept defeat, his son Emperor Akihito expressed the hope that Japan would never again wage war.

"In view of history, I sincerely wish that the ravages of war will never be repeated," Emperor Akihito said.

Despite Mr Koizumi's apology and the repeated calls for peace, many nations in Asia continue to feel that Japan has not done enough to face up to its wartime past.

Japan's relations with some of its neighbours are at their lowest in years, partly because of continued disputes over the war.

Mr Koizumi's apology on Monday is similar to one he made in April, in response to anti-Japanese violence in China sparked by a series of new Japanese school textbooks which played down wartime atrocities.

An editorial in Monday's edition of China's state controlled China Daily newspaper made it clear that Beijing still believes Japan has still not adequately faced up to the past.

"Only with an honest attitude towards history can a nation win reconciliation and then integrate into the global community," the China Daily said.

"Actions speak louder than words... [Mr Koizumi's] words appeared faint and his sincerity is also in doubt," the newspaper said, referring to his past apologies.

In other parts of Asia, people voiced their anger against Japan to mark the anniversary.

On Sunday, a group of women in the Philippines demanded compensation for being forced into sex slavery for Japanese troops. Similar protests also take place regularly in South Korea.

Protesters in Hong Kong marched to the Japanese consulate on Monday, chanting that "Japan's hands are full of fresh blood". A similar march took place in Taiwan.

In Tokyo, there was a heavy media presence at the controversial Yasukuni shrine, where Japanese war dead - including 14 class A war criminals - are honoured.

Mr Koizumi's visits to the shrine have triggered anger among Japan's neighbours, but he did not visit the shrine on Monday.

Other senior politicians did visit, though - including Tokyo Governor Shintaro Ishihara and ruling party executive Shinzo Abe, who is often cited as a candidate to succeed Mr Koizumi.

Memorial events

Other nations are also marking the anniversary of the end of the war with services and memorial events.

In a rare move, a North Korean delegation is in South Korea for the occasion, with senior members of the North's ruling party among the visitors.

In Australia, Prime Minister John Howard paid tribute to his nation's war veterans, who had given the country "the priceless gift of security and freedom."

"Freedom's torch was preserved not just here in Australia, but in the Pacific and in Europe. This was a war of liberation which in a real sense liberated the people of our once bitter enemies," Mr Howard said.

GWR
15-08-05, 11:45 PM
How about this for starters?

The above is a small headline on Page 2 of Bangkok Post's (15/08/05) Outlook, so I guess the word 'Santiparb' must figure in the official Thai language title of the day. This short article is preceded by a cropped photo of SeriThai in Brit-style uniform. [I believe I've seen this photo in a Thai Language 'Photomagazine' book about the life & times of Doctor Puey Ungpakorn, so I guess he is one of the pictured; perhaps the one on the extreme left of this jovial group of 6 SeriThai. I seem to remember the bigger original was taken aboard a ship carrying the group from England to Ceylon.]

The article further tells us the following:-
'Tomorrow [16/08/05] at 7:15AM, Thanpuying Poonsuk Banomyong, Pridi's widow, will attend the unveiling, in the main hall at Thammasart University, of a memorial to Thammasart and the Free Thai [Seri-Thai] Movement'.

The Foreign Minister will also open an exhibition to mark the 60th Anniversary of Peace Day. There will be speeches by Prof. Eiji Murashima (a peace campaigner at Waseda University), Acharn Sulak Sivaraksa & Anand Panyarachun. Not to mention a peace concert, poetry and the TU Chorus. Then a panel discussion of prominent academics. PM Taksin will make a speech on 'Government Policy to Establish Peace' at 4PM. This will be followed by a further concert.

Pkv
17-08-05, 09:36 PM
Published on August 17, 2005, THE NATION

Sixty years on, Boonserm Koompuangpet and friends returned to a much different Thammasat University. Attending the Thai Peace Day celebration yesterday, they carried no weapons but wore a badge showing that they were members of the Free Thai Movement [Kabuankarn Seri Thai] that helped bring peace to the Kingdom at the end of World War II.

Boonserm, now 82, still has vivid memories of the Phrachan campus in 1945. “Japanese soldiers walked around the area,” he said. At the time Boonserm was a student at Pre-Chulalongkorn [college].

He joined with 700 other students, from Pre-Chulalongkorn and Pre-Thammasat, to serve the Free Thai Movement in Bangkok. While 300 seniors were taken for weapons training to a secret place in Chon Buri province, 400 students were trained to use weapons at the university.

Japanese troops occupied the campus and witnessed the drills but did not learn about the Free Thai Movement’s conspiracy to fight back. “They [Japanese soldiers] though we were trained to help them,” he said.

Pol Colonel Chanant Siripoke, chairman of the 1945 Pre-Chulalongkorn and Pre-Thammasat Association, was 18 and a student of Pre-Thammasat at the time. “The training began at 8.30am and ended around 4pm every day,” he said.

Chanant and his friends were told that they would be assigned to protect Bangkok and its suburbs.

However, the group trained at Thammasat never fought until a month after the war ended. They were sent to subdue Chinese rioters in Yaowaraj, Bang Lamphu and Hua Lampong.

“There was a group of Chinese people who were angry at the Thai government [for taking sides with Japan]. They attacked Thais in public places. We fought with them for three days,” Chanant said.

When peace returned to the country, most students returned to their classrooms and went their own ways. Boonserm worked on his BA in accounting at Chulalongkorn University while Chanant applied to study at the Police Academy.

They see each other at the association’s monthly meetings.

“We have about 200 members at present,” its chairman said.

Chanant also had a good impression of Japanese soldiers. “I respected them. They were much disciplined and never bullied Thais,”

Different ages have different feelings. Thai Peace Day, Pridi Banomyong and the Seri Thai Movement are far from her daily lives, said Thichapa Aopattana, an accounting major at Thammasat.

“I only know Pridi is a person who was important for our university,” she said while passing through the venue for the celebration.

Thammasat law student Wasan Chatson, 20, said he just knows there is a Thai Peace Day and might visit the meeting hall when the prime minister gives a speech on government peace-building policy.

airlana
17-08-05, 10:17 PM
Published on August 17, 2005, THE NATION

Different ages have different feelings. Thai Peace Day, Pridi Banomyong and the Seri Thai Movement are far from her daily lives, said Thichapa Aopattana, an accounting major at Thammasat.

“I only know Pridi is a person who was important for our university,” she said while passing through the venue for the celebration.

Thammasat law student Wasan Chatson, 20, said he just knows there is a Thai Peace Day and might visit the meeting hall when the prime minister gives a speech on government peace-building policy.


I never quite understand these statements. These are not kids but young adults with supposedly a better than average education. Yet they know little and care less about recent history and world events.

Same here in Australia where we've just had nation wide commemorations for VJ day. Ask the younger generation about WW2 or the Korean or Vietnam Wars for that matter and they know zilch. Now I don't expect them to have the same degree of interest as I do, but geez, what do they teach in schools nowdays. Gay and lesbian rights?? More of that politically correct nonesense??

Hopefully sometime soon they will make the effort to learn a little about the past and the terrible and tragic consequences of wars and conflicts.

airlana
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Pkv
21-08-05, 08:37 PM
Yeah mate, I completely agree with you there.

Remembered watching something on the telly on some juvenile delinquents vandalising some Kokoda memorial during my stint in Melbourne in '02.