Thailand’s government wants controversial elections to go ahead this weekend, a deputy prime minister said yesterday, despite threats by opposition protesters to disrupt the polls to stop the ruling party returning to power.
Thai Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra was due to meet election officials who want to delay the vote following street violence in which at least 10 people have been killed and hundreds injured in grenade attacks, drive-by shootings and clashes.
“We insist that the election on Feb. 2 must be held because the majority of people want the election,” Thai Deputy Prime Minister Surapong Tovichakchaikul, who is also the foreign minister, told reporters after a Cabinet meeting.
The Thai capital has been shaken by nearly three months of mass street demonstrations demanding Yingluck’s elected government step down to make way for an unelected “people’s council” that would oversee reforms aimed at curbing the dominance of her billionaire family.
The main opposition Democrat Party is boycotting Sunday’s polls, saying reforms are needed to ensure the vote is truly democratic and to prevent abuse of power by the next government.
Advance voting over the weekend was marred by widespread disruption by opposition protesters who besieged polling stations and stopped hundreds of thousands of people from casting ballots.
Protest leader Suthep Thaugsuban has threatened to “close every route” to polling stations again for the main election, raising fears of further violence.
An anti-government rally leader was shot dead on Sunday while giving a speech from the back of a pickup truck in a Bangkok suburb, during the campaign by demonstrators to block the advance voting.
In another apparently politically related killing, the body of a man wearing a wristband popular among protesters was found yesterday near a rally site with several bullet wounds, according to police, although the circumstances of his death were unclear.
“He could be a protester or someone who infiltrated the demonstrators,” Police Colonel Charoen Srisasalak said.
Yingluck’s meeting with the election authorities comes after the Constitutional Court on Friday ruled that the polls could legally be pushed back because of the civil strife.
However, the comments by her deputy indicated little enthusiasm for a delay, which the government fears would only prolong the political deadlock.
The head of Yingluck’s Puea Thai Party on Monday said he opposed a postponement and accused the Election Commission of not doing enough to ensure an orderly vote.
The government says that under the constitution, an election should normally be held no more than 60 days after the dissolution of parliament, which happened early last month.
The opposition says that an election without reforms will not resolve the country’s long-running political conflict.
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