Background
Giles Ji Ungpakorn is the youngest son of former Bank of Thailand governor and Thammasat University rector Puey Ungpakorn (Thai: ป๋วย อึ๊งภากรณ์, rtgs: Puai Uengphakon), and his wife Margaret Smith of London, and holds both Thai and British citizenship.
Education
Giles Ungpakorn was educated in England at Sussex and Durham Universities and the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London before returning to Thailand in 1997.
Career
He formerly worked as an associate professor at Faculty of Political Science, Chulalongkorn University, before he fled to the United Kingdom after facing a lèse majesté charge in Thailand. He has two older brothers, Jon Ungpakorn and Peter Ungpakorn. In 2006, after the military staged a coup and revoked the constitution, Ungpakorn led a demonstration in downtown Bangkok by university students.
He was later accused of lèse majesté for writing a book called A Coup for the Rich, where he argued that the coup was illegitimate and supported by the King.
In February 2007, his English-language academic work A Coup for the Rich was refused distribution by the Chulalongkorn University bookstore. His listing the controversial The King Never Smiles, which he has reviewed and criticised, as a reference was the explanation given by the store manager.
Giles Ungpakorn was formally charged with lese majeste in Bangkok on January 20, 2009. He had 20 days to respond to the charges, after which the Thai authorities would decide whether his case would be given to the Thai courts for prosecution.
Ungpakorn said he was being charged because of the contents of his book A Coup for the Rich, which points out the main reasons the coup in Thailand two years prior took place.
He fled Thailand in February 2009, returning to the United Kingdom. He stated, "I did not believe I would receive a fair trial."
While fleeing Thailand, he wrote Red Siam Manifesto, which explicitly criticised King Bhumibol Adulyadej. He has criticised King Bhumibol for being a "weak, unprincipled" monarch who has never supported democracy, and holds the army, the elites, and the king responsible for supporting the Thammasat University Massacre of 1976.
He has also fiercely denounced the king"s much-touted sufficiency economy principles, branding it an arrogant commandment for the poor to know their place, given that the King is the richest monarch in the world.
He also declares himself a Marxist. In an opinion piece written for the Asia Sentinel website he has discounted the prospects of a successful social and political reform, and has aligned himself with those who are calling for a social revolution to occur in Thailand.
Giles has also criticised those who advocate armed struggle. His latest English language book, Thailand"s Crisis and the Fight for Democracy, published in early 2010, is Giles" attempt to explain the present situation in Thailand before the Red Shirt demonstrations and clashes with the military in April and May 2010.
A post with the name "Ugly Truth Thailand" is run under Giles Ungpakorn"s name.
lieutenant talks about many controversial topics of Thailand"s politics. Ungpakorn discusses the social movements" role in democracy in details.
Politics
Ungpakorn is widely known as an activist with the socialist, Turn Left Thailand group. He is a member of the Thai socialist group Turn Left Thailand, which is part of the Trotskyist International Socialist Tendency.
Membership
Giles is also a Red Shirt and member of Kon Thai United Kingdom, a Red Shirt organisation in the United Kingdom.