Thaksin supporters stage mass rally

Thousands of supporters of exiled former Thai prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra braved floods and torrential rain today rally…

Thousands of supporters of exiled former Thai prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra braved floods and torrential rain today rally to mark the third year since the billionaire's overthrow by the military.

Despite the presence of more than 6,000 riot police and soldiers, about 20,000 Thaksin supporters, known as "red shirts", rallied to demand the dissolution of parliament and the resignation of the most senior royal advisor, Prem Tinsulanonda, whom they accuse of masterminding the coup that toppled Mr ksin.

The United Front for Democracy against Dictatorship (UDD), many from Mr Thaksin's rural strongholds, massed in stormy conditions at Bangkok's Royal Plaza close to Mr Prem's residence, dressed in raincoats and huddled under umbrellas.

There were no reports of clashes at the demonstration, which was the fifth big show of support for the former telecoms tycoon since an army crackdown on the UDD in April, showing the resilience of the pro-Thaksin movement.

READ MORE

"Three years after the coup, our country has slid backwards. There is no justice in society," Mr Thaksin, wearing a red jacket, told cheering supporters via a video link. "The longer this government stays, the bigger the disaster is for the country. Give me just six months as prime minister, and I will bring this country back to normal.”

Despite living in exile after fleeing ahead of a two-year prison sentence for graft, the twice-elected Mr Thaksin remains a major political stakeholder in Thailand because of his vast war chest and his influence over the rural masses.

Thailand has been locked in four years of political stalemate fuelled by violent rallies, assassination attempts, dissolution of political parties and the seizure of Bangkok's main airports, which has left the country of 67 million deeply polarised.

Export credit and risk insurance agency ONDD this week downgraded its medium and long-term political risk rating for Southeast Asia's second-biggest economy because of continued uncertainty and "the absence of a durable solution to the crisis".

Separately, dozens of people were injured today in clashes between villagers and supporters of the anti-Thaksin People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD) in northeastern Si Sa Ket province bordering Cambodia.

A state of emergency had been declared in the province's Kantharalak district, with riot police sent to break up fighting between yellow-shirted PAD protesters and villagers armed with slingshots and stakes, Channel 9 television said.

Scores of villagers hurled rocks at cars and buses transporting 4,000 protesters to the disputed frontier, where they planned to rally to "reclaim" the 11th-Century Preah Vihear temple, which an international court awarded to Cambodia in 1962.

The show of support for Mr Thaksin and the Si Sa Ket clashes will be another setback for Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva as he works to revive the export-driven economy, reassure investors and hold together a fragile coalition plagued by infighting.

Instability within the nine-month old government and the possibility of more clashes has sparked rumours of another coup. The speculation has had no impact on financial markets and most analysts say a coup is unlikely.