Yahoo – AFP,
May 7, 2014
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| Court dismisses Thai PM Yingluck Shinatwatra from office |
The cabinet
swiftly appointed a deputy premier -- Niwattumrong Boonsongpaisan -- as
Yingluck's replacement as the ruling party struggled to regain its footing
after the judicial blow.
The court,
which has played a key role in deposing Shinawatra-linked governments in recent
turbulent years, ruled unanimously that Yingluck acted illegally by
transferring a top security official in 2011.
"Therefore
her prime minister status has ended... Yingluck can no longer stay in her
position acting as caretaker prime minister," presiding judge Charoon
Intachan said in a televised ruling.
Nine
cabinet ministers who endorsed the decision to transfer Thawil Pliensri were
also stripped of their status.
But fears
that the court ruling would wipe out the entire cabinet proved unfounded.
Niwattumrong,
who is also commerce minister, was quickly promoted to the role of caretaker
premier, said Phongthep Thepkanjana, another deputy prime minister.
Ruling
party officials vowed to press ahead with a planned July 20 election to
establish a new government. That poll date has yet to be endorsed by a royal
decree.
While short
of a knockout blow to the government, the court ruling does nothing to ease
Thailand's prolonged political uncertainty.
Trouble
ahead?
Anti-government
protesters are still on Bangkok's streets and the promotion of a
Shinawatra-loyalist may make Yingluck's dismissal a hollow victory.
"Red
Shirt" supporters also threaten to rally to defend the government and
press for elections, raising fears of clashes. They will mass on Saturday in a
Bangkok suburb.
Jubilant
anti-government demonstrators blew whistles outside the court to mark Yingluck's
removal -- a key demand of their movement, which is seeking to curb the
influence of Yingluck's billionaire brother Thaksin Shinawatra.
Thaksin
lives overseas to avoid jail for corruption convictions, but is accused of
running the country by proxy through his sister.
"I am
happy even though the whole cabinet has not been removed. People who do not
respect the law should be thrown out," protester Linjong Thummathorn told
AFP.
The kingdom
has been bedevilled by a bitter political schism since 2006 when an army coup
deposed former telecoms magnate Thaksin as prime minister.
He is
reviled by the Bangkok elite, middle class and royalist southerners who say he
has sponsored nepotism and widespread corruption and who perceive him as a
threat to the monarchy.
But he is
loved in the poorer north and northeastern regions and among the urban working
class for recognising their burgeoning political and economic aspirations.
Fighting
back tears
They have
returned Shinawatra-led or linked governments to power in every election since
2001.
In a
defiant press conference Yingluck reiterated her innocence of the abuse of
power accusation.
"I am
proud of every minute I have worked as prime minister because I came from a
democratic election," she said, at times fighting back tears.
Six months
of street protests have left 25 people dead and hundreds wounded in gun and
grenade attacks, kindling fears of wider clashes between rival political sides.
Anti-government
demonstrators are likely to reject the latest poll date. They want an appointed
premier to enact loosely-defined "reforms" to curb the influence of
the Shinawatras before any new election.
A general
election called by Yingluck in February to shore up her besieged government was
disrupted by protesters and boycotted by the main opposition party.
It was
later annulled by the Constitutional Court, enraging Red Shirts who said the
judges effectively stole their vote.
The ruling
party has accused the court of railroading Yingluck's case through because it
is biased against the Shinawatras.
The
Constitutional Court oversees cases of violations of Thailand's charter, which
was rewritten after Thaksin's removal.
In 2008 it
forced two Thaksin-linked prime ministers from office.
Yingluck
will also find out over the coming days if she will be indicted by anti-graft
officials for neglect of duty in connection with a costly rice subsidy scheme.
An
unfavourable ruling could see her banned from politics for five years.
With both
sides convinced they can prevail, the ongoing battle for "Thailand's
soul" looks set to drag on, said Thitinan Pongsudhirak, director of the
Institute of Security and International Studies at Bangkok's Chulalongkorn
University.


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