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Thursday, 9 June 2016

Thailand's King Bhumibol marks 70 years on the throne

A woman holds up images of Thailand's King Bhumibol Adulyadej to celebrate the 70th anniversary of his reign in Bangkok (9 June 2016)
King Bhumibol inherited the throne in 1946 at the age of 18
Thailand is marking 70 years since King Bhumibol Adulyadej, the world's longest-reigning living monarch, ascended to the throne. 

Buddhist monks walk towards The Grand Palace during the commemoration of the 70th anniversary of Thailand's King Bhumibol Adulyadej's reign in Bangkok on June 9, 2016.
The 770 monks - an auspicious figure in Thailand - gathered at the Grand Palace in Bangkok
Thai Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha gives alms to monks at the Grand Palace in Bangkok (9 June 2016)
Thai Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha was at the ceremony to give alms to the monks
The celebrations began with a religious ceremony in Bangkok, led by 770 Buddhist monks, an auspicious number. The 88-year-old king is revered by Thais, for whom he has been a figure of stability through the country's decades of political upheaval.

Buddhist monks attend a ceremony at the Grand Palace to commemorate Thailand
King Bhumibol was last seen was when the palace released a video of him being taken in his wheelchair to visit a shop inside a hospital in Bangkok
But he is in poor health and has not been seen in public for months. Profile: King Bhumibol Adulyadej On Tuesday, he had heart surgery, with what the palace said were "satisfactory results".
Buddhist monks arrive for a ceremony at the Grand Palace to commemorate Thailand
The 88-year-old king is seen as a unifying force in a country divided along political lines
The procedure, known as balloon surgery, was to widen his arteries after tests showed he had insufficient blood in the heart muscles, the statement said.

Thai woman Ling Poomuang, 61, with a calendar showing Thai King Bhumibol Adulyadej, the world
People across Thailand show their reverence for their king with multiple pictures of the monarch hung on their walls
The king has spent much of the past few years in hospital, and his health is closely watched by Thais.
A man poses for a photograph to show his tattoo of Thailand
Crowds gather whenever the king's convoy travels, and many sport yellow - symbolising royalty - on their birthdays
"The relationship between Thais and the King is deep, more than one can actually begin to explain," Col Winthai Suvaree, a spokesman for the royalist junta, said to Reuters.

"He is a father to the land."

Several hundred people had gathered outside the palace on Thursday morning to wish the king well.
He is not expected to make a public appearance.

"I want to make merit for the king to encourage him to have good health. That's how I can show loyalty to him even though he can't see it, that's fine," 68-year-old Bangkok resident Chonmanee Smativat told AFP.

"I want him to know that we all love him. He has worked hard for Thais. Since I was little I have seen how hard he works." The king's popularity stems partly from his long reign and service to Thai people, but also because he is seen as an arbiter in politics.

Thailand has been wracked by political strife in recent years and is currently governed by a military-led government. Strict lese majeste laws ban any criticism of the king or the royal family.

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