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Thai government rejects army chief's plea for election

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By Nopporn Wong-Anan
Reuters
Wednesday, November 26, 2008; 6:08 AM

BANGKOK (Reuters) - Thailand's army chief told the elected government on Wednesday to step down and call a snap election as a way out of a deepening political crisis, but a government spokesman rejected the call.

Army chief Anupong Paochinda reiterated that he would not launch a coup only two years after the military's removal of Thaksin Shinawatra as prime minister.

At a news conference in Bangkok, he also told the People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD) protest movement to withdraw from Bangkok's international airport and cease its anti-government campaign.

"The prime minister should dissolve parliament and call a snap election," Anupong said in outlining a four-point plan to end the country's long-running political crisis.
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Government spokesman Nattawut Saikuar rejected the army chief's plea. "The prime minister has said many times that he will not quit or dissolve parliament because he has been democratically elected. That still stands," he told Channel 3 television.

There was no immediate reaction from the PAD, which began a "final push" on Monday to unseat the administration, blockading Bangkok's main airport and causing flights to be canceled on Wednesday.

Somchai, whom the PAD accuse of being a puppet of Thaksin, his brother-in-law, is due to return from an Asia-Pacific summit in Peru later on Wednesday.

His flight has been rerouted and his handlers are not revealing his destination. Thai media reports speculated he may declare a state of emergency in Bangkok.

Earlier, protest leader Sondhi Limthongul rejected a government offer of talks to end the PAD's blockade of the airport, where thousands of angry travelers were left stranded.

"You must quit first before we sit down and talk with you," he told cheering supporters at the airport, repeating the PAD's demand that Somchai resign.

After masked PAD members stepped up their action by breaking into the control tower at Suvarnabhumi airport, a rival pro-government group said it would launch its own street action, raising the prospect of clashes.

"What they have done are terrorist acts," Jatuporn Prompan, a ruling party politician and leader of the anti-PAD Democratic Alliance Against Dictatorship, told a news conference.

VOLATILE MARKETS

The unrest forced the stock market and Thai baht lower in early trade as investors feared the political crisis would exacerbate the problems facing the Thai economy, but stocks had turned higher by the close amid speculation Somchai would quit.

Thailand's finance minister has said the protests could have a damaging effect on the economy, which depends on tourism and exports, both vulnerable to the global economic slowdown.

The government forecast this week that the economy would grow just 4.5 percent this year, its slowest rate in seven years.

Thousands of passengers slept overnight on benches and luggage carousels at Suvarnabhumi, many angry that airport staff fled when the PAD demonstrators, dressed in the movement's yellow shirts, invaded the terminal.

"We came here and we saw all these people in yellow. We thought they were football fans. Now we're just waiting," said a Dutchman who gave his name as Mark.

Thai Airways, the national carrier, said 16 inbound flights had been diverted to Bangkok's old airport Don Muang, 45 km (30 miles) from Suvarnabhumi, and another three flights to a Vietnam War-era airbase 150 km southeast of Bangkok.

Most airlines halted services to the Thai capital, a regional hub with 125,000 passengers passing through Suvarnabhumi daily.

Police have gone out of their way not to escalate the tension by confronting the PAD, although gunfire broke out on the streets on Tuesday as armed PAD members took on government supporters.

At least 11 people were hurt, officials said, in violent scenes shown on Thai television that are likely to undermine public support for the PAD, which claims the backing of Bangkok's urban middle classes and elite.

Broadly speaking, Thaksin and the government have the support of rural voters and the urban poor.

washingtonpost.com
 
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Desperate times in Thailand

Nov 26th 2008 | BANGKOK
From Economist.com
An anti-government mob in Bangkok goes all-out to provoke a coup

A DESPERATE attempt by Thailand’s royalist and extreme-right People’s Alliance for Democracy (PAD) to cause chaos and force the army to seize power has had a somewhat different outcome. On Wednesday November 26th, a day after the PAD’s yellow-shirted supporters seized Bangkok’s main international airport, the army chief, General Anupong Paochinda, ordered the government to dissolve parliament and call fresh elections, while also ordering the PAD to leave the airport and end its protest campaign against the government. What happens next is unclear: the government, so far at least, is rejecting the army chief’s demand.

The army chief was forced to move by the growing violence on the capital’s streets. On Tuesday PAD “guards” shot at government supporters on one of Bangkok’s main roads. There were reports of explosions near both the main airport, Suvarnabhumi, and the old international airport, Don Muang, where the government has had its temporary offices since August, when the PAD seized Government House.

The PAD launched its “final battle” this week, promising to summon a crowd of over 100,000 to bring down the government, which is led by allies of Thaksin Shinawatra, a prime minister deposed in a coup in 2006. But only a fraction of that number turned out. The PAD’s increasingly thuggish tactics have lost it much of the support it once had from middle-class Bangkokians. Calls for a national strike this week were largely ignored. The PAD’s founder, Sondhi Limthongkul, is struggling to restructure his debt-laden media empire, which has been spewing out venomous propaganda against the government.

Despite its dwindling support the PAD’s remaining crowds, perhaps a few tens of thousands, had until General Anupong’s intervention been left unchecked. The government and the police, having suffered an onslaught of criticism from pro-PAD newspapers after deadly clashes outside parliament on November 7th, stood back, hoping that the protesters’ excesses would accelerate their loss of support. The army declined to stage a coup, as the PAD wants, but has also refused to tackle the protesters. Its hesitance is probably in part because of the backing the PAD has from the powerful royal palace, including Queen Sirikit, who made her support open by officiating at the cremation of a protester who died in the November 7th clashes.

It is now three years since Mr Sondhi began holding what were at first peaceful rallies to protest at corruption and abuses of power by Mr Thaksin—of whom Mr Sondhi had hitherto been an ally. The 2006 coup to topple Mr Thaksin seemed to grant the PAD its wish. His Thai Rak Thai party, whose policies of cheap health care and microcredit had won strong support from rural voters, was subsequently dissolved. But last December, after 15 months of dismal army-backed rule, voters returned to power a coalition led by Mr Thaksin’s new People’s Power Party (PPP), prompting the PAD to resume its protests.

The Thai crisis looks ever more clearly like a fight to the finish between the country’s traditional, royalist elite and a brash, authoritarian but highly popular leader from outside that Bangkok-based clique, who threatened its dominance.

The PAD claims that Mr Thaksin is plotting to overthrow the revered King Bhumibol and install a republic. This is probably untrue, although the businessman-turned politician, with his populist projects for the rural masses and his slick image-making, was becoming a rival to the elderly king for the public’s affections. The PAD, arguing that the Thai masses are too “uneducated” to choose sensible leaders and resist vote-buying, wants to return to the semi-democracy of the 1980s, increasing the influence of the army, palace and royalist bureaucracy and diluting the popular vote.

Mr Thaksin, although recently convicted in absentia for corruption, is not giving up yet. He recently staged a peaceful rally of around 70,000 of his red-shirted supporters at a sports stadium and addressed them by telephone. The exiled ex-leader is promising another big gathering next month, when he says he will make revelations about some of his foes. His main message seems to be that he is still popular and will not go away. Some diehard supporters have sent a tougher message, threatening to bomb the PAD’s rallies. Several PAD supporters have been killed or maimed in explosions this month. It is unclear who was responsible.

The government, led by Mr Thaksin’s brother-in-law, Somchai Wongsawat, refuses to budge. Mr Somchai was scheduled to return to Thailand on Wednesday from a summit in Peru. The crisis, and the need for ministers to dodge marauding protesters, have meant that it is doing little governing, just when Thailand’s exports are crumbling, its vital tourist trade faces collapse and unemployment looks set to soar. The courts, which seem to have been fast-tracking cases against Mr Thaksin and his allies while soft-pedalling on the PAD, may soon dissolve the PPP for alleged vote-buying in last December’s election. But Mr Thaksin already has a third party, Puea Thai, to take its place, with a cousin, reportedly lined up to lead it. If there is an election now and it is fair, the Thaksinites seem likely to win it.

Some sort of military or judicial coup could now take place with a civilian front being put on a government backed by the army and palace. The opportunistic parliamentary opposition, the Democrats—who have cheered on the PAD—might conceivably lead such a front government. However, in such a case, Mr Thaksin’s increasingly angry red-shirts might take the place of the royalist yellow-shirts, hitting the streets to bring down the new government.

A mob in Bangkok attempts to provoke a coup | Desperate times in Thailand | The Economist
 
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