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Thailand’s Military Chiefs Turn Down Meeting Request with Suthep

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Suthep’s campaign to oust Yingluck has been strong on rhetoric but failed to stop the government from functioning.

 

BANGKOKAnti-government protest leader Suthep Thaugsuban pinned his hopes on winning support from the powerful security forces on Thursday to take forward a campaign to oust Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra and install an unelected administration.

Suthep Thaugsuban, a firebrand veteran politician, has asked police and military chiefs to meet him by Thursday evening and choose their side in the latest crisis engulfing Bangkok.

However Thai Army Chief Prayuth Chan-ocha has turned down a request for a meeting in a huge blow to Suthep Thaugsuban the leader of anti-government protesters who had asked police and military chiefs to choose sides in the crisis amid dwindling public support.

Suthep’s campaign to oust Yingluck has been strong on rhetoric but failed to stop the government from functioning.

Missed deadlines for Yingluck to resign have become the norm for a protest movement that has openly courted anarchy on Bangkok streets in the hope of inducing a military coup or judicial intervention that, as in the past, might disband Thaksin-allied parties or ban their leaders from politics.

Suthep’s statements have been bewildering at times. He has told police to arrest Yingluck for treason, ordered civil servants and security forces to report to him and not the government, and has called for citizen “peacekeeping forces” to take over from police

Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra has called a snap election for February 2 but that has not satisfied the protesters, whose leader, Suthep Thaugsuban, wants an unelected “people’s council” to run the country.

But the number of demonstrators on the streets is falling. On Monday, 160,000 had gathered round Yingluck’s office but the number has dropped to just a few thousand since then.

The politically powerful army has staged or attempted 18 coups in the past 80 years, including the ousting of Yingluck’s brother, Thaksin Shinawatra, in 2006, but it has said it does not want to get involved this time although it may mediate.

“The chief of the armed services will not meet Mr Suthep today,” deputy army spokesman Werachon Sukondhapatipak told Reuters, implying that the heads of the army, navy and air force would not meet Suthep either.

It was not immediately clear if the police chief would meet Suthep, but this appeared unlikely as the police are traditionally aligned with Thaksin.

The eight-year, on-and-off political conflict centers on Thaksin, a former telecommunications tycoon popular among the rural poor. The protesters view Yingluck as his puppet.

Thaksin, who lives in self-imposed exile, courted rural voters to win back-to-back elections in 2001 and 2005 and gained an unassailable mandate that he used to advance the interests of major companies, including his own.

He was convicted in absentia of graft in 2008 but has dismissed the charges as politically motivated.

His opponents are Thailand’s royalist elite and establishment who feel threatened by his rise. Trade unions and academics see him as a corrupt rights abuser, while the urban middle class resent what they see as their taxes being used as his political war chest.

A small group of protesters briefly entered the premises of Government House on Thursday and protest leaders said they would cut water and power to the complex if police did not withdraw. The police held their positions and there was no confrontation.

“Last night protesters tried to cut electricity at Government House and fired slingshots at police on duty,” police spokesman Piya Utayo said in a televised statement.

“Some protesters and a third party have tried to escalate the situation,” he said, without elaborating.

A police officer on the premises, who declined to give his name because he was not authorized to speak to the media, said several small, crude explosives described as “ping pong bombs” had been thrown into the grounds on Thursday. No one was hurt.

INVESTMENT RISK

Moody’s Investors Service, a rating agency, said in a note the crisis was negative for Thailand’s sovereign rating.

“Prolonged protests will weigh on an already fragile growth outlook for 2014,” it said.

“In addition, heightened political tensions have marred investor confidence, as reflected in the accelerated decline in Thailand’s official foreign exchange position since late October,” it said. Foreign reserves fell to $167.5 billion on November 29 from $173.3 billion on October 25.

Analysts say the economy would be hurt if infrastructure projects suffered further delays, as seems likely, and the current account would suffer if tourists were scared off.

Yingluck said in a televised statement she would invite people from all walks of life to a meeting on December 15 to discuss “a peaceful way to reform the country”, which could be further debated and implemented after the election.

Suthep has offered little in the way of policy proposals.

His sometimes bewildering statements have included a call for police to arrest Yingluck for treason, an order to civil servants and security forces to report to him, not the government, and for citizen “peacekeeping forces” to take over from police.

He has rejected the early election and wants an unelected “people’s council” to run Thailand. Yingluck is caretaker prime minister until the election but Suthep wants her and her ministers to step down now.

“If a plane crashed with the whole cabinet in it and they all died, Thailand would still go on,” Suthep told supporters late on Wednesday.

Thaksin’s supporters have said they would weigh in to defend Yingluck if Suthep appeared poised to overthrow her. Jatuporn Promphan, a leader of a pro-Thaksin group, promised to mobilize crowds that would dwarf the anti-government protests.

Thaksin’s “red shirt” supporters brought central Bangkok to a halt in April and May 2010 in protests aimed at forcing then Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva to call early elections.

That protest was put down by the military. More than 90 people, mostly Thaksin supporters, were killed over the period.

Abhisit and Suthep, a deputy prime minister to Abhisit, have been accused of murder related to those events.

Abhisit was formally charged with murder at Bangkok’s criminal court on Thursday and granted bail. The next hearing was set for March 24, 2014, but the case could drag on for months, or even years. Suthep did not turn up.

By Amy Sawitta Lefevre

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