Protest-hit Thai PM proposes national reform council

Protest-hit Thai PM proposes national reform council

BANGKOK - Agence France-Presse
Protest-hit Thai PM proposes national reform council

Thailand's Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra speaks during a news conference after a cabinet meeting at an air force base in Bangkok December 25, 2013. AP Photo

Thailand's prime minister proposed a "national reform council" Wednesday to seek a way out of the political crisis gripping the kingdom, following weeks of mass street protests against her government.
 
Yingluck Shinawatra said the body would be set up in parallel with a February 2 general election to recommend constitutional amendments, economic and legal reforms and anti-corruption measures. "It is now time to develop a mechanism to push forward and mobilise national reform," she said in an address to the nation.
 
But the plan was immediately rejected by protest leaders who want reforms before elections, in a bid to curb the political influence of the prime minister's family.
 
Yingluck "is not sincere about reform", said a spokesman for the protest movement, Akanat Promphan.
 
"The prime minister can show her responsibility and sacrifice by stepping down so that the reform process can begin," he added.
 
In recent weeks tens of thousands of protesters have taken to the streets of Bangkok seeking to oust Yingluck's elected government and install an unelected "people's council" in its place. The premier has called a snap election for February 2 to try to ease tensions, but the main opposition Democrat Party -- which has not won an elected majority in about two decades -- has vowed to boycott the vote. The Democrat-backed protesters are demanding loosely-defined reforms -- such as an end to alleged "vote buying" as well as anti-graft measures -- before new elections are held in around a year to 18 months. The political conflict broadly pits a Bangkok-based middle class and elite against rural and poor voters loyal to Yingluck's brother Thaksin Shinawatra, who was ousted as prime minister in a coup in 2006 and lives in self-exile.
 
Protesters accuse Thaksin, a billionaire tycoon turned politician, of controlling his sister's government from his home in Dubai.
 
Even some of Yingluck's supporters criticised the proposed selection process for the 499-member reform council, which will be supervised by 11 representatives from the military, civil service, business and other sectors.
 
"All 11 people are from the Thai elite and have nothing to do with the Thai people," said Thida Thavornseth, chairwoman of the "Red Shirt" political movement which is broadly loyal to Thaksin. "This could cool the political temperature but in reality only the people want reform -- not the elite," she said, stressing the importance of the February election. The protesters have tried to stop candidates signing up for the election by blocking the entrances to the stadium serving as a registration venue.

Demonstrators tried to force their way into the building on Wednesday, triggering scuffles with police. Election authorities have expressed confidence that candidates will be able to register in time.
 
But the demonstrators have vowed to keep up their campaign to disrupt the polls, with protest leader Suthep Thaugsuban threatening to "shut down the country" to prevent people voting.
 
Pro-Thaksin parties have won every election since 2001, most recently with a landslide victory under Yingluck two years ago, and analysts doubt the opposition would win the February polls if it took part.
 
The recent protests have left five people dead and more than 200 wounded in street violence, although tensions have abated recently. It is the worst unrest since 2010, when more than 90 civilians were killed in a bloody military crackdown on "Red Shirt" protests under the previous Democrat Party-led government. Yingluck's cabinet on Wednesday extended a special security law for two more months to cope with the protests.
 
The law, known as the Internal Security Act, gives the police additional powers to block routes, ban gatherings, carry out searches and impose a curfew, although not all the measures have been used.
 
At least 150,000 people joined the latest anti-Thaksin mass protest in the capital on Sunday, according to security officials. Organisers said the turnout was much higher.