Thailand PM begins negotiations with Red-Shirts
March 28, 2010

Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva is holding face-to-face talks with leaders of the protesters demanding that he resign and call new elections.
Mr Abhisit’s spokesman said he had “accepted the request to negotiate” in an effort to “restore peace and minimise the chance of violence”.
The prime minister has consistently said he will not bow to any ultimatums.
Correspondents say the talks are a sign of compromise after two weeks of demonstrations in the capital, Bangkok.
Earlier, four soldiers were injured after grenades were thrown at a heavily-guarded army barracks on the outskirts of the city, which Mr Abhisit has been using as a base.
It is not known who carried out the attack, but the protesters - a loose coalition of left-wing activists and supporters of exiled former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra - were to march there on Sunday.
Neutral venue
Mr Abhisit went on television on Sunday morning to say he was open to negotiations, but insisted he would “not there be there to talk” if the protesters proceeded to march on the barracks.
|
PROTEST TIMELINE
2006: Yellow-shirts launch street protests to oust PM Thaksin Shinawatra
Sept 2006: Thaksin ousted in military coup
Dec 2007: Thaksin allies win first post-coup elections
Sept 2008: Yellow-shirts occupy Bangkok government buildings, clash with pro-Thaksin red-shirts
Nov 2008: Yellow-shirts occupy Bangkok’s airports, forcing cancellation of hundreds of flights
Dec 2008: Thaksin-allied government falls, rival Abhisit Vejjajiva forms government
Apr 2009: Red-shirts storm Asean summit, clashes erupt in Bangkok
Mar 2010: Red-shirts launch protest aimed at bringing government down
|
“It will not be possible under this kind of tense circumstance to hold negotiations,” he said. “I still insist that I am open to negotiation as long as there are no threats, hostility or pressure.”
Red-shirt leader Nattawut Saikua subsequently delayed the rally, saying he wanted to give the government time to consider an offer of negotiations between small delegations.
Mr Abhisit’s spokesman later announced that the government and the protesters had each agreed to send representatives to the talks at a neutral venue.
“In order to restore peace and minimise the chance of violence, the prime minister is ready to accept the request to negotiate with the demonstrators,” Satit Wongnongtoey said.
The talks, being held at an education institute in Bangkok, are being broadcast live on television at the request of the Red-Shirts.
Only one of the three individuals on each side has been speaking - Mr Abhisit for the government, and Veera Musigapong for the Red-Shirts. They have listened politely while the other sets out their positions.
“This is not likely to take long because the atmosphere is good. Everyone is acting in good faith for the benefit of the country,” another red-shirt representative, Weng Tojirakarn, said beforehand.
A previous offer of negotiations through intermediaries was rejected by the Red-Shirts, who say they are sticking to their demand that Mr Abhisit dissolve parliament and hold elections.
The Red-Shirts say they will stay in Bangkok until the government resigns
|
The BBC’s Rachel Harvey in Bangkok says there are still substantial sticking points to be overcome, but after two weeks of stalemate it seems there may now be signs of movement.
The fact that the talks are being broadcast live is unprecedented in Thailand, where there is a general perception that political deals are normally done behind close doors or within army barracks, our correspondent says.
The move comes a day after tens of thousands of protesters forced soldiers to move away from several key locations in the capital, where they had been deployed under special security legislation.
On Thursday, Mr Thaksin called for a campaign of “civil disobedience”.
The Red-Shirts, formally the United Front for Democracy against Dictatorship, have sought to distance themselves from Mr Thaksin - who lives abroad having fled a two-year jail sentence for a conflict of interest case - painting themselves as fighters for democracy.
They say Mr Abhisit came to power illegitimately in a parliamentary vote after a pro-Thaksin government was forced to step down. Mr Thaksin was ousted as prime minister in a military coup in 2006.
Source: bbc.co.uk/
Comments
Got something to say?
You must be logged in to post a comment.

