By Amy Sawitta Lefevre
BANGKOK (Reuters) - Anti-government demonstrators in Thailand
resumed street protests on Monday after lying low for weeks, piling
pressure on increasingly beleaguered Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra,
who is expected to face impeachment within days.
Her opponents were emboldened by a Constitutional Court decision on
Friday to nullify last month's election, delaying the formation of a new
administration and leaving Yingluck in charge of a caretaker government
with limited powers.
Yingluck's opponents first took to the streets in late November.
Twenty-three people were killed and hundreds wounded in the political
violence before the protests began to subside earlier this month. But
the court ruling appears to have given a second wind to the agitation.
The protests are the latest installment of an eight-year political
battle broadly pitting the Bangkok middle class and royalist
establishment against the mostly rural supporters of Yingluck and her
billionaire brother, former premier Thaksin Shinawatra, who was ousted
in a 2006 coup.
There are growing fears that Thailand could be heading towards
serious civil unrest. After months of restraint, Thaksin's "red shirt"
supporters have begun making militant noises under hardline new leaders.
They plan a big rally on April 5, possibly in Bangkok, and the
political atmosphere is expected to become even more highly charged in
coming days.
Yingluk has until March 31 to defend herself before the National
Anti-Corruption Commission for dereliction of duty over a ruinous
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 is likely to have an
anti-Thaksin majority after an election for half its members on March
30.
CLOCK TICKING
The Constitutional Court annulment of the election could offer a way
out of the political stalemate if the main opposition Democrat Party,
which boycotted the February 2 poll, decides to run in a fresh vote.
So far, however, the Democrat Party has given no clear indication on what it plans to do.
The Election Commission, which is in charge of organizing the new
poll, met on Monday to decide how to proceed. Its chairman said on
Friday it would take at least three months to organize a new vote.
It is increasingly uncertain whether Yingluck will last that long, due to the mounting legal challenges.
The prospect of her removal has bolstered the confidence of protest leaders.
Protest leader Suthep Thaugsuban has said he will lead a march every
day this week to urge supporters to join a "massive" rally in Bangkok
on Saturday to press for political reforms before a new vote takes
place.
"Our rally will be the biggest signal to Yingluck Shinawatra and the
Thaksin regime that the Thai public does not want elections before
reforms," Suthep said in a speech on Sunday.
His supporters prevented voting in 28 constituencies on February 2,
providing grounds for the Constitutional Court to annul the election.
Yingluck's supporters say the court, set up after the 2006 coup that
removed her brother, has a record of ruling against parties linked to
the former premier.
At the height of the protests more than 200,000 people took to the
streets to demand Yingluck's resignation and to try to rid the country
of the influence of Thaksin, whom they accuse of nepotism.
The protesters want an unelected "people's council" installed to
oversee electoral changes that would, among other things, prevent close
Thaksin allies from running for office.
(Additional reporting by Aukkarapon Niyomyat; Editing by Alan Raybould and Simon Cameron-Moore)
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