Thai opposition urges PM to resign, refuses to back poll - Islamic Invitation Turkey
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Thai opposition urges PM to resign, refuses to back poll

Thai opposition urges PM to resign, refuses to back poll

Thailand’s opposition leader Saturday refused to commit to elections mooted for July to end a deadly political crisis, instead calling for Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra to resign before new polls later in the year.

 

AFP reported, the kingdom, divided by years of political unrest, has been without a fully functioning government since December, severely hampering policy making and draining the energy of the nation’s once-dynamic economy.

Launching his well-trailed proposal to ease the crisis, Democrat Party leader Abhisit Vejjajiva urged Yingluck and her cabinet to resign to make way for an appointed interim administration which would oversee a debate on reforms.

It would then hold a referendum on the reform proposals to drag Thailand out of its current paralysis with elections six months later, he told reporters, without directly saying whether or not his party would participate in the July poll.

“Yingluck should make the sacrifice of withdrawing from power,” he said, explaining his roadmap is inspired by the fear of spiralling political violence, which has so far left at least 25 people dead and hundreds wounded.

On Wednesday Thailand set new elections for July 20, polls pro-government supporters hope could revive Yingluck’s battered administration — although they still need to be endorsed by a royal decree.

Abhisit’s proposal echoes demands for reforms before elections made by anti-government protesters who have massed on Bangkok’s streets for six months in a bid to oust Yingluck and curb the influence of her billionaire family on Thai politics.

Yingluck faces two legal challenges to her premiership which could see her toppled over the coming weeks.

The first relates to an allegation of abuse of power and the second to her role in a costly rice subsidy scheme.

Thailand has been riven by an eight-year power struggle between a royalist establishment — supported by parts of the judiciary and the military — and the Shinawatra clan, which has traditionally enjoyed strong support in poor, rural northern Thailand.

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