💾 Archived View for library.inu.red › file › dindeng-dao-din-interview-part-1.gmi captured on 2023-01-29 at 09:01:35. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content

View Raw

More Information

➡️ Next capture (2024-07-09)

-=-=-=-=-=-=-

Title: Dao Din – Interview – Part 1
Author: DinDeng
Date: Apr 20, 2021
Language: en
Topics: Thailand, Anarchism, students
Source: https://www.dindeng.com/dao-din-interview/

DinDeng

Dao Din – Interview – Part 1

During the past year, the protest movement in Thailand has drawn the

attention of international media to the kingdom and the people’s

struggle for democracy. However, the majority of this coverage has been

focused on the liberal People’s Party (Khana Ratsadon) group, who are

primarily middle-class people from Bangkok and central Thailand. All the

while a more radical coalition of groups from Isaan, the poorest and

most rural region of the country, has been growing in size and

influence, drawing huge crowds of supporters into the streets.

Isaan is the poorest and least industrialised region of the country,

many Isaan’ers suffer in financial procarity and rural poverty.

Historically the region has been a hotbed of anti-Bangkok sentiment,

notably hosting the Communist insurgency, which ran from the 1960’s into

the 80’s and providing much of the muscle behind the Red Shirt movement,

which brought Bangkok to a standstill on numerous occasions in the 00’s.

Today’s coalition is made up of much younger, but nonetheless, highly

experienced members, centred around Dao Din, a leftist protest group

born out of Khon Kaen University. From Dao Din, a number of other groups

have emerged, including the political party The Commoners, the Anarchist

education group UNME Of Anarchy and the Thalufah activism group.

Elsewhere in Isaan other radical groups have sprung up, such as Maha

Sarakham University Democracy Front and Khob Plerng. Recently, a new

umbrella alliance has been formalised in the Ratsadon Khong Shi Moon

group, which is attempting to institutionalise these Isaan based groups

under one banner.

We spoke to a Dao Din activist, Pang, about these groups, the character

of Isaan and the protest movement.

Could you tell us a bit about your background and how you got involved

with Dao Din?

I’m from Sakon Nakhon in Isaan and went to study law at Khon Kaen

University. I got involved with Dao Din as a freshman, they had a camp

and invited us to join. They brought us to learn about various social

and political issues in Isaan, much of it revolved around agriculture

and human rights.

How did Dao Din get started before you joined?

Dao Din started 17 years ago, as a group of just 4 or 5 people, who were

against GMO plants that would harm Isaan agriculture and farmers. But

the protest group really started 7 years ago around the time of the last

coup. They began to get involved in political organisation and make the

connection between politics and agriculture. Then they also got involved

with local issues, usually regarding the environment and land rights,

fighting for local farmers and rural people, joining and helping to

organise protests and things like that.

A lot of activist groups have come out of Khon Kaen University in recent

years, why is that?

Khon Kaen is the biggest city in Isaan and has the main university. The

university and the city have a lot of spaces for activism. Baan Dao Din

(Dao Din House) is one of the main places. It’s a home we use to centre

the organising. We hang out, cook, talk and live together there, a lot

of people who spent time there were inspired to start their own groups.

Really it all started there. You can stay with Dao Din and be involved

in as many other groups as you like. There are specific groups focused

on specific issues, for example, homelessness, the environment, green

agriculture and democracy.

What are the beliefs and ideals of Dao Din members?

We’re a big group, we have a lot of different beliefs, but we have some

core ones that unite us, it’s something we’re constantly discussing.

Firstly we believe in real equality and equal rights. Most people

believe in Marxism, Anarchism, very left wing ideals.

Can you tell us a bit about the other groups like UNME and The Commoner

Party?

To start with UNME, it was founded by Pai (Jatupat Boonpattararaksa, the

current leader of Dao Din). Dao Din is more focussed on ecology, but

UNME is a broader political education and protest group. The point was

to have a group with a specific focus on theory and politics, rather

than doing everything through Dao Din.

As for The Commoner Party, it was started around 7 years ago, our

friends wanted to have a voice in the mainstream political sphere. This

was around the time of the last coup, but political parties were banned

from forming at the time, so it only became official 3 years ago. Really

it’s a tool to raise our voice politically. Most Commoner Party people

come from local NGO’s and community groups as well as the Dao Din

related groups.

There are many groups that surround The Commoner Party, and they’re not

just active in Isaan. It’s about localised politics, local issues. It’s

an attempt to make real democracy, allowing people to make their own

governing decisions. It’s about bottom up politics, rather than

centralised top down power from Bangkok.

Is there a tactical approach to having all these different allied

groups?

So The Commoner Party are like the ‘democracy approach’, while Dao Din

is the activist approach and UNME is focused on education, although Dao

Din does education too. They’re all working in unison. We all live and

learn together, developing tactics in unison.

There’s a long history of left-wing activism in Isaan, including the

defeated communist insurgency which ran from the 60’s to 80’s. Is that

an inspiration to activists today?

Of course we’re influenced by the past. There are lots of older people

who teach us about our history and inspire us. Although about the

Communist Insurgency it’s a bit more complicated, a lot of people don’t

talk about it. We aren’t taught about it in school, the state doesn’t

want to teach it. So I didn’t even know that much about it, but we’re

trying to change that for the future and I should know more, I’m trying

to learn more.

Even recently, I only learned 2 years ago that my grandfather was a

communist who was disappeared by the state, but my parents didn’t even

tell me. They’re still afraid of people being disappeared again.

What’s the relationship between Dao Din and the other protest groups in

Bangkok and the rest of the country?

We join almost every protest we can, we’ll join with any pro-democracy

event, sending people from Isaan, or organising events in Khon Kaen to

coincide with it. When they have something we can help with, we’ll help

and we have meetings with the other leaders who we know from the Student

Union. In the future we have to continue to organise our umbrella group,

we need these groups in each region, not just Isaan, Northern Thailand,

The South, Central Thailand. We have friends all over the country, but

we don’t have any Dao Din cells in other regions of the country, it’s

just an Isaan thing right now.

I think generally we have quite a lot of unity with the other groups,

but the way we work is very different. We focus on social and ecological

issues that affect specific communities and really get involved with

them, joining their struggles, while The People’s Party doesn’t focus on

the local issues, they talk about democracy very broadly.

Right now we have tactical unity, but of course there are things we

disagree with, so we’re allied over democracy, so if there’s anything we

disagree with, we won’t join in with that. We just want to have control

over our own lives, Dao Din is constantly talking with local people in

Isaan, and what they all say is that they want decentralisation. They

want to decide for themselves, decentralisation and direct democracy.

Khong Shi Moon is the new umbrella group for the Isaan region. Do you

plan to expand it outside of Isaan in the future?

There are many people across the country, we’re friends with, we talk

together, we exchange ideas of how to unify the four regions, but we’re

focused on Isaan right now. The plan for the future is difficult because

of the new rise of Covid cases, plus the government has been very

aggressive with arrests lately. So we’re going to try and connect more

people into a larger coalition and find some Covid safe activities for

them to join us with.

We also have relationships with the old redshirt uncles and aunties.

When we have activities red shirts always join us, when we go on tours

and stuff to different provinces they’re always asking how they can help

us and how to get involved. What we’re trying to do is build a large

coalition in the name of Isaan and involve and develop ideas with as

many people as we can.