男女羞羞视频在线观看,国产精品黄色免费,麻豆91在线视频,美女被羞羞免费软件下载,国产的一级片,亚洲熟色妇,天天操夜夜摸,一区二区三区在线电影
Make me your Homepage
left corner left corner
China Daily Website

Thai protesters to outline reform plans to military

Updated: 2013-12-14 16:18
( Agencies)

Thai protesters to outline reform plans to military

Anti-government protest leader Suthep Thaugsuban greets his supporters before addressing them from the stage near the Government House in Bangkok December 10, 2013. [Photo/Agencies]

BANGKOK -- Leaders of the Thai protest movement trying to overthrow the government meet the heads of the politically influential armed forces on Saturday to try to persuade them to back their call for reforms and the suspension of the electoral system.

Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra called a snap election on Monday, when 160,000 people besieged her office at Government House. That failed to defuse the protests, although numbers on the street have dwindled since.

Yingluck is caretaker prime minister until the election, which has been set for February 2.

"The government has no legitimacy to run the country. Today, Thailand has no government and no parliament. Today, there is already a political vacuum," protest leader Suthep Thaugsuban told students, academics and others at a forum at Thammasat University in Bangkok on Saturday.

He wants to use that perceived vacuum to set up a "people's council" to push through reforms and eradicate the influence of Thaksin Shinawatra, Yingluck's brother and a former prime minister who was ousted by the military in 2006.

The reform programme remains sketchy but its priorities are becoming clearer.

A note circulated late on Friday after protest leaders met the press said an interim government should focus on "laws relating to elections and political parties, to ensure that vote-buying and electoral fraud are prohibited".

It also promised "forceful laws to eradicate corruption", decentralisation, the end of "superficial populist policies that enable corruption" and the reform of "certain state agencies such as the police force" so they are more accountable to the public.

Thailand's eight-year political conflict centres on Thaksin, a former telecommunications tycoon popular among the rural poor because of policies pursued when he was in power and carried on by governments allied to him after he was toppled.

He gained an unassailable mandate that he used to advance the interests of big companies, including his own. Since 2008 he has chosen to live in exile after being sentenced in absentia to jail for abuse of power, a charge he calls politically motivated.

Ranged against him are a royalist establishment that feels threatened by his rise plus, in the past, the military. Some academics see him as a corrupt rights abuser, while the urban middle class resent what they see as their taxes being spent on wasteful populist policies that amount to vote-buying.

MILITARY NEUTRAL, SO FAR

The army has staged or attempted 18 coups in the past 80 years. So far it has declined to get involved in the present crisis but it has offered to mediate.

Boonyakiat Karavekphan, a political analyst at Ramkamhaeng University in Bangkok, did not expect much from Saturday's meeting with the military chiefs. "It is a public forum, which means that what will be discussed will be just a show," he said.

"The military is very aware that it can't take sides and can't act as it has done in the past because the international community is watching closely," he added.

Army spokesman Colonel Werachon Sukondhadhpatipak said this week the military was trying to encourage all sides to remain peaceful.

"We try to avoid getting ourselves involved directly or be seen as taking sides," he said.

Asked if the military supported the government, he replied: "At the moment, yes."

The government has accepted the need for reform and will kick off the process with a forum on Sunday, but it insists that change can only legally come after the election.

The prospects of that election taking place may become clearer at the start of next week when the opposition Democrat Party, Thailand's oldest, decides whether to take part.

Democrat lawmakers resigned from parliament on December 8 and joined the street protests.

Suthep, a deputy prime minister in the Democrat-led government until 2011, had resigned earlier to lead the movement, which gained impetus in early November after Yingluck's government tried to push through a political amnesty bill that would have allowed Thaksin to return home a free man.

As deputy premier, Suthep authorised a military crackdown to end weeks of anti-government protests by Thaksin supporters in central Bangkok in 2010. Scores of protesters died.

 

Related:

Thai PM dissolves parliament, to run in election

Thai king approves general election on Feb 2

Two dead in Thai political violence

Previous Page 1 2 3 4 Next Page

 
Hot Topics
Sea-level rise since the Industrial Revolution has been fast by natural standards and may reach 80 cm above today's sea-level by the year 2100 and 2.5 m by 2200 even without development of unexpected processes, according to a new research made public on Friday.
...
...
主站蜘蛛池模板: 景泰县| 大田县| 广宗县| 陕西省| 仪陇县| 齐河县| 临泽县| 阜平县| 疏勒县| 怀柔区| 赣榆县| 木兰县| 北川| 磴口县| 若尔盖县| 青铜峡市| 哈尔滨市| 宜兴市| 阳泉市| 赤壁市| 上虞市| 大方县| 巴林右旗| 收藏| 绍兴县| 太仓市| 萨嘎县| 金山区| 乌兰察布市| 应城市| 谷城县| 新沂市| 轮台县| 新余市| 广丰县| 湟中县| 大冶市| 丰宁| 荆州市| 汕头市| 南郑县| 朝阳县| 邵武市| 忻城县| 仁寿县| 石门县| 广昌县| 绥芬河市| 芜湖县| 丹凤县| 津市市| 买车| 靖边县| 繁峙县| 南岸区| 隆回县| 于田县| 慈溪市| 西畴县| 洞头县| 延津县| 曲松县| 垦利县| 潜江市| 新龙县| 治多县| 民勤县| 隆林| 汉源县| 华容县| 勐海县| 中江县| 泗阳县| 平邑县| 盐边县| 青岛市| 图们市| 漯河市| 崇左市| 隆林| 苗栗市| 莱西市|