
Thailand (historically known as Siam and officially the Kingdom of Thailand) is a country in Southeast Asia, located at the center of the Indochinese Peninsula, spanning 513,120 square kilometers (198,120 sq mi), with a population of almost 70 million. The country is bordered to the north by Myanmar and Laos, to the east by Laos and Cambodia, to the south by the Gulf of Thailand and Malaysia, and to the west by the Andaman Sea and the extremity of Myanmar. Thailand also shares maritime borders with Vietnam to the southeast, and Indonesia and India to the southwest. Bangkok is the nation's capital and largest city. Thai people migrated from southwestern China to mainland Southeast Asia in the 11th century. Indianised kingdoms such as the Mon, Khmer Empire and Malay states ruled the region, competing with Thai states such as the Kingdoms of Ngoenyang, Sukhothai, Lan Na, and Ayutthaya, which also rivaled each other. European contact began in 1511 with a Portuguese diplomatic mission to Ayutthaya, which became a regional power by the end of the 15th century. Ayutthaya reached its peak during the 18th century until it was destroyed in the Burmese-Siamese War. Taksin quickly reunified the fragmented territory and established the short-lived Thonburi Kingdom. He was succeeded in 1782 by Buddha Yodfa Chulaloke, the first monarch of the current Chakri dynasty. Throughout the era of Western imperialism in Asia, Siam remained the only nation in the region to avoid colonization by foreign powers, although it was often forced to cede territory, trade, and legal concessions in unequal treaties. The Siamese system of government was centralized and transformed into a modern unitary absolute monarchy during the reign of Chulalongkorn. In World War I, Siam sided with the Allies, a political decision made in order to amend the unequal treaties. Following a bloodless revolution in 1932, it became a constitutional monarchy and changed its official name to Thailand, becoming an ally of Japan in World War II. In the late 1950s, a military coup under Field Marshal Sarit Thanarat revived the monarchy's historically influential role in politics. Thailand became a major ally of the United States and played an anti-communist role in the region as a member of the failed SEATO, but from 1975 sought to improve relations with Communist China and Thailand's neighbors. Apart from a brief period of parliamentary democracy in the mid-1970s, Thailand has periodically alternated between democracy and military rule. Since the 2000s the country has been caught in the continual bitter political conflict between supporters and opponents of Thaksin Shinawatra, which resulted in two coups (in 2006 and 2014), along with the establishment of its current constitution, a nominally democratic government after the 2019 Thai general election, and large pro-democracy protests in 2020-2021 which included unprecedented demands to reform the monarchy. Since 2019, it has been nominally a parliamentary constitutional monarchy; in practice, however, structural advantages in the constitution have ensured the military's hold on power. Thailand is a middle power in global affairs and a founding member of ASEAN and ranks very high in the Human Development Index. It has the second-largest economy in Southeast Asia and the 22nd-largest in the world by PPP. Thailand is classified as a newly industrialized economy, with manufacturing, agriculture, and tourism as leading sectors.

Thailand

Countries Confront a Malevolent Force
for Countries Confront a Malevolent Force in The Unseen Evil: From Saloth Sar to Beisac
Suggested by benpopplewell

In Khmer folklore, a Beisach is a vengeful, bloodthirsty demon often depicted as a man-eater or a spirit of extreme evil. Many Cambodians and of course the World retrospectively describe Pol Pot as a "demon king" or Beisach to explain the scale of his atrocities in Cambodia between 1975 and 1979 which applied to him in the wake of the Cambodian genocide. Because of his violent death in April 1998 and the unimaginable suffering he caused, he is considered by many locals to have been transformed into an immoral, powerful, and malevolent spirit that haunts his last hiding places in the jungle of Anlong Veng near the Thai border—a "master of the land" (or Arak), holding a supernatural influence over the territory. In the years following his death, strange cult-like activities surrounded his grave, where he was worshiped as a powerful, demonic, evil, spirit. The description of his transformation into a "post-mortem" entity often parallels the idea of a demon or evil spirit from Cambodia that cannot rest, a being that is both a victim of its own karma and a source of continued terror both inside and outside Cambodia to the world. The memory and folkloric of Pol Pot became part of a haunting, spiritual, and supernatural landscape where his actions are perceived as a form of lasting, demonic, and paranormal trauma after he was buried in the remote jungle area of Anlong Veng. The word Beisac (often transliterated as Peisach or Beisach) refers to a hungry ghost or a demonic entity.





