| The earliest civilisation in Thailand
is believed to have been that of the Mons in central Thailand, who brought
a Buddhist culture from the Indian subcontinent. In the 12th century, this
met a Khmer culture moving from the east, the Sumatran-based Srivijaya
culture moving north, and citizens of the Thai stateof Nan Chao, in what
is now southern China, migrating south. Thai princes created the first
Siamese capital in Sukhothai, later centres in Chiang Mai and, notably,
Ayuthaya.
The Burmese invaded Siam in both the 16th and
18th centuries, capturing Chiang Mai and destroying Ayuthaya. The Thais
expelled the Burmese and moved their capital to Thonburi. In 1782, the
current Chakri dynasty was founded by King Rama I andthe capital was moved
across the river to Bangkok.
In the 19th century, Siam remained independent by
deftly playing off one European power against another. In 1932, a peaceful
coup converted the country into a constitutional monarchy, and in 1939
Siam became Thailand. |


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| During WW II, theThai
government allowed Japanese troops to occupy Thailand.After the war,
Thailand was dominated by the military and experienced more than twenty
coups and countercoups interspersed with short-lived experiments with
democracy. Democratic elections in 1979 were followed by a long period
ofstability and prosperity as power shifted from the military to the
business elite.
In February 1991 a military coup ousted the
Chatichai government, but bloody demonstrations in May 1992 led to the
reinstatement of a civilian government with Chuan Leekpai at the helm.
This coalition government collapsed in May 1995 over a land-reform scandal
but replacement Prime Minister Banharn Silpa-archa was no better. Dubbed a
'walking ATM' by the Thai press, he was forced to relinquish the prime
ministership just over a year later after a spate of corruption scandals.
Ex-general and former deputy PM Chavalit Yongchaiyudh headed a dubious
coalition until late 1997, when veteran pragmatist Chuan Leekpai retook
the reins. Thai cynics will tell you that, despite all the
leader-swapping, things never change. Widespread vote-buying and
entrenched corruption make a joke of democracy, and until this is
rectified Thailand's claims to democratic status and political stability
will remain as shaky as ever.
In 1997 the Thai baht pretty much collapsed,
dragging the economy (and many other South-East Asian economies) down in a
screaming heap. In August the International Monetary Fund stepped in with
a bailout package of austerity measures, which - although it slowed
Thailand's growth dramatically and hit the poor hardest - seemed to have
turned things around by early 1998. By the turn of the new century,
Thailand's economy had stopped going into free fall, but rebuilding had
only just begun. Genuine attempts to weed out corruption seem underway,
but the poverty-stricken members of Thailand are still wary of promises
and agitating for more reforms.
Over recent months, the relatively new Thai Rak
Thai Party (Thais Love Thais), led by Thaksin Shinawatra, emerged as a
force in Thai politics and saw many sitting MPs defect to its ranks. In
parliamentary elections (January 2001), Thai Rak Thai trounced Prime
Minister Chuan Leekpai's democrats and will form a new coalition
government in Thailands first election under a new constitution designed
to reduce electoral fraud. Nonetheless, allegations of corruption caused
the Electoral Commission to run revotes in sixty-two constituencies. |