Thai Election Body Urges Delay in Polls Amid Clash
Rungroj Yongrit/European Pressphoto Agency
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS / The International New York Times | December 26, 2013
BANGKOK — Thailand’s Election Commission on Thursday urged the
government to delay polls scheduled for Feb. 2 after hours of violent
protests, adding to political uncertainty in the country.
The government of Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra has been insisting
the polls should go ahead as planned. The protest movement seeking to
oust her is demanding they be delayed, and has vowed to disrupt them.
Government officials didn’t immediately answer calls seeking a response.
The development followed violent protests between demonstrators and
police outside a sports stadium where candidates were gathering to draw
lots for their position on polling papers.
The demonstrators, some armed with sling shots, threw rocks and
attempted to break through police lines. Officers fired tear gas and
rubber bullets. At least 48 people were injured. Police said one of its
officers had sustained a bullet wound, presumably fired by protesters.
Inside the stadium, candidates for at least 27 parties took part in the
lot-drawing process, which went on unaffected despite the turmoil
outside the gates.
Four election commissioners left the stadium on a helicopter, according to a spokesman for the body.
Three officers were injured, said police Col. Anucha Romyanan. He urged
the demonstrators to assemble peacefully and said “attempts are being
made to escalate the political situation by causing violence.”
The clashes were contained to the area around the stadium but stretched
into the morning. It was the first violent incident in nearly two weeks
of daily protests on the streets of Bangkok.
The protesters have been demanding that Yingluck step down since
mid-October, and street unrest has occasionally broken out. They oppose
the polls because Yingluck is seen as sure to win them.
Police have largely shown restraint and have made no move to arrest the
ringleader, Suthep Thaugsuban, who is demanding the country be led by an
unelected council until reforms can be implemented.
Thailand has been wracked by political conflict since Yingluck’s
brother, former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, was toppled by a 2006
military coup. The protesters accuse Yingluck of being a proxy for
Thaksin, who lives in self-imposed exile to avoid jail time for a
corruption conviction but still wields influence in the country.
Thaksin or his allies have won every election since 2001 thanks to
strong support in the north and northeast of the country. His supporters
say he is disliked by Bangkok’s elite because he has shifted power away
from the traditional ruling class, which have strong links to the royal
family.
On Wednesday, Yingluck announced a proposal for a national reform
council to come up with a compromise to the crisis, but it was rejected
by the protesters. They now plan more civil disobedience and street
protests in a bid to provoke such chaos that Yingluck will be forced to
resign as caretaker.
The country’s main opposition party, which is allied with the
protesters, is boycotting the elections, which Yingluck called early in
hopes of giving her a fresh mandate and defusing the crisis.
Yingluck led the country for two years relatively smoothly. But in
October, her government tried to introduce an amnesty law that would
have allowed Thaksin to return to the country as a free man, sparking
the latest round of unrest.
No comments:
Post a Comment