Credit Sakchai Lalit/Associated Press |
Protesters Say They’ll End Blockades in Bangkok
BANGKOK
— In what appeared to be a major retreat by the movement to overthrow
the Thai government, protesters on Friday said they were abandoning
their campaign to shut down Bangkok and would dismantle their blockades
of major intersections set up in January.
The protesters’ retreat came after an escalation of violence in recent weeks and a rare speech
by the powerful head of Thailand’s army on Monday. In the speech he
distanced himself from the protest movement’s goals and emphasized the
importance of adhering to the country’s Constitution.
Yet
analysts said the change in tactics by the movement did not mean the
end of Thailand’s power struggle, which has left Prime Minister Yingluck
Shinawatra leading a weak caretaker government after protesters
hampered elections in early February, preventing the formation of a new
government.
Two
smaller factions of protesters have vowed to continue their blockades
of government offices. And the protest movement retains considerable
support in the Thai bureaucracy, among the elite and middle class in
Bangkok, and in southern Thailand. A series of contentious rulings in
the courts have hampered the government, including a court order banning
the dispersal of the protests. And a hasty and aggressive investigation
by a government agency into a costly rice subsidy program could result
in Ms. Yingluck being barred from politics.
Somsak
Jeamteerasakul, a prominent historian, said Friday’s announcement was
the biggest retreat since the protest movement began four months ago,
and many people might feel relieved.
But he said the street protests were no longer the biggest impediment facing the government.
“If
the protest ended today, the crisis would not be over,” he said in a
posting on Facebook. Even if the election went forward and Parliament
were able to convene, Ms. Yingluck’s party would be unable to govern
until the opposition movement returned to the electoral process, he
said.
The
Democrat Party, the country’s oldest one and historically the voice of
the Bangkok ruling class, allied itself with the protesters and
boycotted the election. The party is seeking the appointment of a prime
minister to replace Ms. Yingluck.
Sombat
Boonngamanong, an activist in the Red Shirt movement, which supports
the government, said the protesters were forced to retreat because,
unlike in previous crises, the military leadership was noncommittal to
them.
“Suthep was stuck in the street and waiting,” Mr. Sombat said. “But they never arrived. He felt disheartened.”
The
military in 2006 overthrew Thaksin Shinawatra, Ms. Yingluck’s brother
and the founder of what is the most successful political movement in
recent Thai history. It has won every election since 2001, and its
dominance is one of the major grievances of his detractors.
Mr.
Thaksin now lives in self-exile after what he says was a politicized
trial in 2008 in which he was convicted of illegally procuring land.
The
protest movement, which in December and January drew tens of thousands
of office workers and wealthy Bangkok residents into the streets,
struggled to attract similar crowds in recent weeks. At its height, the
so-called shutdown of Bangkok affected only a limited number of areas in
the vast metropolis.
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