Tens of thousands of Thai anti-government protesters rallied across Bangkok yesterday in their latest bid to topple Thai Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra, a day before a crucial vote to elect a new Senate.
Waving flags and blowing whistles, protesters marched from Lumpini Park in the business district of Bangkok, where protesters retreated to earlier this month, toward the city’s old quarter.
“There are enough protesters to cause traffic headaches, but there are fewer participants than at past rallies,” Paradorn Pattanathabutr, a security adviser to the prime minister, told reporters.
“We think the crowd will swell to 50,000 people. Protesters are still trickling in from outside the capital and we have 8,000 police on standby if violence takes place but, overall, we’re not expecting anything to happen,” he added.
Thailand has been in crisis since former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra, Yingluck’s brother, was ousted in a 2006 coup. The conflict broadly pits the Bangkok-based middle-class and royalist establishment against the mostly poorer, rural supporters of the Shinawatras.
Yesterday’s march was seen as a test of the anti-government movement’s popularity as the number of protesters has dwindled considerably in recent weeks.
By midmorning yesterday, police put the crowd at around 30,000. Around 500 protesters from the Network of Students and People for the Reform of Thailand, a splinter group of the main protest group, broke into the compound of Government House, a site largely abandoned by officials.
Over the past five months, protesters have shut Thai state offices and disrupted a Feb. 2 election which was nullified by a court on March 21, leaving Thailand in political limbo and Yingluck at the head of a caretaker government that retains limited powers.
Since the current round of protests began in November last year, 23 people have been killed in political violence.
Protesters want political and electoral reforms before a new general election, and to rid the country of Thaksin’s influence.
“We will no longer accept this oppressive regime. They, Thaksin and Yingluck, are no longer welcome in Thailand,” protest leader Suthep Thaugsuban told reporters as he led protesters who shouted “Yingluck, get out!”
Yingluck has dismissed calls by protesters to step down, but faces several legal challenges that could lead to her removal. She has until tomorrow to defend herself before Thailand’s National Anti-Corruption Commission for dereliction of duty over a rice-buying scheme that has run up huge losses.
If the commission recommends her impeachment, she could be removed from office by the upper house Senate, which may have an anti-Thaksin majority after today’s election for half its members.
The vote is to elect 77 senators for the 150-seat Senate. The rest are appointed, and a government attempt to make it a fully elected body was one of the sparks that set off the latest unrest in November.
The non-elected Senators are picked by judges and senior officials from agencies such as the National Anti-Corruption Commission, members of an establishment whom government supporters see as viscerally anti-Thaksin.
Red shirt supporters of Yingluck and Thaksin are sounding more militant under hardline new leaders and say they are prepared to take to the streets of Bangkok as moves to impeach Yingluck gather pace, increasing the risk of a confrontation.
They plan a big rally, possibly in Bangkok, on Saturday.
At the height of the current protests, more than 200,000 people took to the streets to demand Yingluck’s resignation.
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