Thai protesters start bid to topple government

By AMBIKA AHUJA | REUTERS

BANGKOK: Anti-government protesters began gathering in Bangkok on Friday for what they promise will be a "million-man march" in coming days to paralyze Thailand's capital and force the government to call elections.

About 40,000 soldiers and police fanned out across the city as several thousand red-shirted supporters of deposed premier Thaksin Shinawatra began gathering in one of the biggest challenges yet to Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva.

But the political turbulence has failed to shatter confidence in Thailand's financial markets. Many investors and political analysts doubt even violent protests will derail the government, which is backed by the military's top brass and the urban elite.

In a reflection of this, Thai stocks have surged 75 percent in the past 12 months on nearly $2 billion of foreign fund inflows, though they were a touch weaker on Friday on some disquiet among local retail investors.

In five major areas of Bangkok, protesters gathered under searing afternoon sun to listen to speeches by leaders of their movement, the United Front For Democracy Against Dictatorship (UDD), standing on trucks-turned-makeshift stages.

"We are calling for the return of power to the people. Let them decide the fate of this country," one "red shirt" leader, Veera Muksikapong, told cheering supporters.

Economists caution that possible unrest could hurt some businesses and sap consumer confidence in Southeast Asia's second-biggest economy, possibly forcing the central bank to delay an expected rise in interest rates from record lows.

But most expect the rising trend in Thai stocks, among the cheapest in Asia, to remain intact, noting that "red shirt" protests last April that sparked Thailand's worse political violence in 17 years failed to unseat the government.

Foreign investors are more focused more on a swift, export-led economic rebound in Southeast Asia's emerging markets, and have snapped up about $500 million of Thai stocks since January, with most of the buying in recent weeks.

"Like the UDD's 'last stand' in April 2009, the 'million-man march' may prove to be nothing of the kind and the stability of this regime offers encouragement to investors," said Timothy Powdrill, a political risk analyst at consultancy Riskline ApS.

The protesters will disperse later on Friday before regrouping on Sunday with the "red shirts" vowing to bring hundreds of thousands from the provinces into Bangkok's streets - a scale almost unprecedented in recent years. Organizers say the rally will last at least seven days.

Many businesses and schools were shut in the capital while some companies allowed staff to work from home.

Armed guards stood at many banks and state buildings after government warnings of potential sabotage, including bombings.

The protests add a new strain to a seemingly intractable political conflict pitting the military, the urban elite and royalists, who wear the revered king's traditional colour of yellow at protests, against the mainly rural supporters of Thaksin, who say they are disenfranchised and wear red.

The protesters say the Oxford-educated Abhisit came to power illegitimately by forming a parliamentary coalition with the help of the military that toppled Thaksin in a 2006 bloodless coup on charges of massive corruption and disloyalty to the monarch.

The "red shirts" chafe at what they say is an "unelected elite" preventing allies of twice-elected Thaksin from returning to power through a vote. Adding to their anger, Thailand's top court last month seized $1.4 billion of Thaksin's assets, saying they were accrued through abuse of power.

Protesters marched to a military base where Abhisit held a security meeting, police headquarters and a government television station. Thousands chanted: "Elites get out.”

Few expect a million protesters, but the prospect of even tens of thousands flooding the streets has rattled nerves in the city of 15 million people.

"There are all sorts of rumours going around about how it may turn violent so it is best to close, then wait and see," said Puangthong Limjitikul, an open-air restaurant owner in Bangkok.

Protesters accuse authorities of trying to fan the fears, but the government insists the threat of violence is real.

"I will not respond to threats," Abhsiti told reporters.

Government House, which includes Abhisit's office, has been cordoned off. Authorities have closed several other roads to prevent protesters from besieging government buildings.

In 2008, a rival protest group sought to topple a Thaksin-allied government by seizing Government House for three months and shutting the country's international airport for eight days. The UDD insist they would not use the same tactics.

 

Post your comment

required

required (email will never be displayed)

Please enter the following characters in the box provided (case sensitive). This helps us prevent automated programs from creating accounts and sending spam.

All comments are subject to approval

Terms and conditions

Newsletter

Yes, I would like to receive daily news updates from Arab News in my mailbox.

Latest comments

Saudi mother says Indian cult brainwashed son

As usual article is incomplete and title of this news item putting Arab News in doc for spreadi

Abdul Ghani at Jul 30, 2010 21:38

10 comments

Local Press: Enlighten children against sexual abuse

Very nice comment Mr. Michael. I'd like to add " and who will keep an eye on those who abuse ex

Marjan Khan at Jul 30, 2010 21:30

2 comments

Israeli plan to attack Iran

TOMM, if you are reading this, even I wonder why US and some of it's Allies Blindly supports Is

Mohammed Mujeeb at Jul 30, 2010 21:30

10 comments

Where is the proof?

Mr Andrew, I can imagine that it would be hard for you to come to terms with, but Britian is in

Neville at Jul 30, 2010 21:16

1 comments

Israeli plan to attack Iran

Muslims now is the time..Be United in Faith, Be Role Models, Be Responsible and Respectable Lea

Mohammed Mujeeb at Jul 30, 2010 21:16

10 comments

Judges to probe Kashmir deaths

MDS,not true.Muslims in India and Kashmir are living like orphans.

Ubaid at Jul 30, 2010 21:15

4 comments