Thailand's military accepts election result

July 04, 2011 03:01 pm | Updated November 17, 2021 01:19 am IST - BANGKOK

Former Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra speaks to the journalists at his luxury villa in Dubai, United Arab Emirates on Monday.

Former Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra speaks to the journalists at his luxury villa in Dubai, United Arab Emirates on Monday.

Thailand’s military eased concerns of renewed turmoil Monday by accepting the sweeping electoral win of toppled ex-premier Thaksin Shinawatra’s party, while his sister vowed to reconcile the deeply divided nation as its first female prime minister.

The election marked an extraordinary rebuke of the military-backed establishment that deposed Mr. Thaksin in a coup five years ago, and the opposition’s strong mandate in parliament was likely to boost stability in the short-term -- a fact reflected in a sharp rise in the Thai stock market Monday.

Mr. Thaksin’s overthrow in 2006 triggered years of political unrest in the Southeast Asian kingdom, including mass street protests launched by Mr. Thaksin’s supporters last year that were crushed in a bloody army crackdown.

Defence Minister Gen. Prawit Wongsuwon said the army would accept a government led by Mr. Thaksin’s sister, 44-year-old Yingluck Shinawatra, and vowed the military would not stage a coup.

“I’ve said this several times,” Prawit was quoted as saying by several Thai newspapers Monday. “We are not going to intervene.”

Ms. Yingluck announced an agreement Monday to form a five-party coalition government. Her Pheu Thai party won a majority of 265 seats in the 500—seat lower house of parliament outright, according to preliminary results of Sunday’s polling; Ms. Yingluck said the agreement with four minor parties would boost her coalition to 299 seats.

The accord came unusually quickly for Thai politics, where hard bargaining usually takes place over allocation of Cabinet seats. The pact should strengthen Ms. Yingluck’s government-to-be, especially if legal challenges under electoral law force some of her party’s lawmakers from their positions.

The army-backed incumbent Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva, meanwhile, resigned as leader of the outgoing ruling party, Democrat Party spokesman Buranaj Smutharaks told The Associated Press. The Democrats won 159 seats.

Exiled political analyst Giles Ji Ungpakorn called the election results “a slap in the face for the dictatorship.”

“They prove without any doubt that the majority of people have rejected the military, the Democrat party and the royalist elite,” Giles said in a statement from Britain.

Ms. Yingluck told reporters that the first mission of her administration would be- how lead the country to unity and reconciliation.”

“I myself, and Pheu Thai, are determined to serve the nation,” Ms. Yingluck said, adding that her government would boost transparency and fight corruption.

Thaksin, her billionaire brother, was convicted of graft and lives in exile in Dubai to escape a two—year—prison sentence. Thaksin says the charges are politically motivated.

Speaking in Dubai on Monday, Thaksin hailed the electoral result.

“The Thai people spoke. They told the world, the whole country ... (that) the last five years, the country has gone nowhere.”

“It’s very clear,” he said of those who cast ballots, “that they want to see reconciliation in the country, the end of the conflict ... it will be a big challenge for Pheu Thai.”

Mr. Thaksin said he would stay in Dubai for the time being “doing business,” and if his sister’s party needs advice, he will give it. “If they dont need, I dont have to worry. The Thai people will be in good hands.”

Asked about his return to politics, Mr. Thaksin said “I may be too old ... I really want to retire.”

Mr. haksin and his proxies have won the country’s last four elections. By contrast, the Democrat party -- backed by big business, the military and circles around the royal palace -- has not won a popular vote since 1992.

Thailand’s democratic process has been repeatedly thwarted over the years, with 18 successful or attempted military coups since the 1930s.

Mr. Thaksin’s overthrow was followed by controversial court rulings which removed two of the pro—Thaksin premiers who came after -- one of whom won a 2007 vote intended to restore democracy in the nation of 66 million people.

Those events took place amid anti—Thaksin “Yellow Shirt” protests which saw demonstrators overrun the prime minister’s office and shut down both of Bangkok’s international airports in 2008.

When Abhisit built a ruling coalition with the parties that remained in Parliament after the court rulings and what critics called the coerced defections of some lawmakers to his camp, pro—Thaksin “Red Shirts,” composed largely of the rural poor, took to the streets in protest.

They overran a regional summit in 2009 and last year paralyzed Bangkok’s wealthiest district for two months. By the time they were dispersed in an army crackdown, some 90 people were dead and around 1,800 wounded, mostly protesters.

Neighboring Cambodia’s Foreign Minister Hor Namhong, meanwhile, welcomed Ms. Yingluck’s victory, saying he hoped the two countries would be able to work together to solve tensions along their border over ownership of land surrounding ancient Hindu temple that have repeatedly boiled over into fighting.

Cambodia’s leader Hun Sen is considered a strong ally of Mr. Thaksin, who briefly served as an adviser to the Cambodian government, and the political shake-up in Thailand will go a long way toward easing border tensions.

Ms. Yingluck said her coalition would be joined by Chart Thai Pattana, with 19 seats in preliminary results; Chart Pattana Puea Pandin, with 7 seats; Palang Chon, 7; and Mahachon, 1.

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