The Freeman

Protesters occupy Thai heart of power

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BANGKOK — From ornate staterooms once used to host dignitarie­s including Barack Obama, Thailand’s opposition protesters are plotting the appointmen­t of an unelected premier in a move which government supporters warn could spark civil war.

Six months after they launched their campaign, triggering violence that has left 25 dead and hundreds wounded on both sides, demonstrat­ors have one foot inside the seat of power — and another rooted in the street.

In a highly symbolic challenge to the authority of the wounded administra­tion, protesters have set up base inside a wing of the largely abandoned government headquarte­rs, where they are now holding press conference­s for the internatio­nal media.

“It is urgent and necessary for the country to have a new prime minister and government to run the country,” protest leader Suthep Thaugsuban — wanted by police for insurrecti­on — declared on Tuesday in a cavernous room adorned with chandelier­s and portraits of the revered king.

Thailand’s first female premier Yingluck Shinawatra was removed from office last week along with nine cabinet ministers in a controvers­ial court ruling denounced by her supporters as part of a “judicial coup.”

The remnants of her government are clinging to power, leaving the two sides as deadlocked as ever.

It is the latest twist in a political conflict stretching back to a military coup in 2006 that removed Yingluck’s elder brother Thaksin Shinawatra as premier.

Thaksin later fled the country to avoid jail for a corruption conviction, but is accused of pulling the strings of power from his base in Dubai.

The opposition is now counting on the upper house of parliament to complete the task of ending the political dominance of the billionair­e Shinawatra family which has lasted more than a decade — punctuated by a coup and court rulings.

It wants the Senate to invoke Article 7 of the constituti­on and seek the king’s blessing for the appointmen­t of a “neutral” premier to replace caretaker Prime Minister Niwattumro­ng Boonsongpa­isan, who was picked by the remainder of Yingluck’s cabinet. The protesters argue that the upper chamber is the only functionin­g state assembly, with the lower house dissolved since December.

But it is unclear if the vaguely worded Article 7 has a legal basis while Niwattumro­ng’s government is still in power.

The caretaker premier insists he retains authority until there are new elections — scheduled for July 20 — which experts believe Thaksin’s party would win.

“We do not want violence. We do not want any killings. We could prevent them (from using Government House) but on the other hand, you may face violence,” Niwattumro­ng told foreign reporters this week at the government’s emergency base at a defense ministry building in northern Bangkok.

Voters in the poor but populous north and northeast have helped return Thaksin parties to power in every election completed since 2001.

Polls held in February were voided after disruption by opposition protesters.

Any move to hand power to an unelected regime would be incendiary to pro-government “Red Shirts,” now encamped in a Bangkok suburb, who have warned it could spark civil war.

Observers say the power play inside the upper chamber is being corralled by the acting Senate speaker — and renowned anti-Thaksin figure — Surachai Liangboonl­ertchai.

He has been holding talks in the Senate all week, including with Suthep, and has set a deadline of Friday to unveil his “roadmap” through the crisis.

“Surachai may decide to be the gatekeeper through which a request to the palace to invoke Article 7 is made,” said Paul Chambers, director of research at the Institute of South East Asian Affairs at Chiang Mai University.

Hundreds of anti-government supporters are dug in around Government House, cocooned within fortificat­ions topped with sandbags and razor wire.

 ??  ?? Thai anti-government protest leader Suthep Thaugsuban talks during a meeting inside Government House in Bangkok.
Thai anti-government protest leader Suthep Thaugsuban talks during a meeting inside Government House in Bangkok.

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