channelnewsasia.com - Thai court bans PM, flights to resume
   
 
  blogs  
 
yournews
   
   
Video Finance Lifestyle Travel Weather Discussion TV Shows
CNA Live    | About Us 
 
  Home ›
 
Asia Pacific News

 
 

Thai court bans PM, flights to resume
Posted: 02 December 2008 1856 hrs

 
 
Photos  of

   
 
Related News
Thai protesters agree to clear airport
Thai court dissolves ruling party, bans PM from politics
Tourism official says 350,000 travellers unable to leave Thailand
Nearly 40 empty planes evacuated from Thai airport

BANGKOK: A Thai court stripped Prime Minister Somchai Wongsawat of his post and outlawed the ruling party on Tuesday, prompting jubilant anti-government protesters to lift a blockade of Bangkok's main airport.

Party leaders quickly vowed to form another government under a new banner but without Somchai, who was barred from politics five years by the Constitutional Court in a vote fraud case.

The move was welcomed by the People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD), which occupied Suvarnabhumi airport a week ago to cap a months-long campaign to oust Somchai, the brother-in-law of exiled former premier Thaksin Shinawatra.

"My duty is over. I am now an ordinary citizen," Somchai, 61, told reporters in the northern city of Chiang Mai from where he has been governing since the blockade began.

Under a military constitution adopted after a 2006 coup against then-premier Thaksin, any political party in which a single executive is convicted of vote fraud must be dissolved and all executives banned.

Somchai, a former lawyer, spent less than three months in power, beset by the royalist protesters who accused his government of acting as a proxy for their nemesis Thaksin and of being hostile to the monarchy.

"As the court decided to dissolve the People Power Party (PPP), therefore the leader of the party and party executives must be banned from politics for five years," said Chat Chonlaworn, head of the nine-judge court panel.

"The court had no other option," he said.

Hours after the verdict, the PAD and airport authorities said they had reached an agreement to resume flights from Suvarnabhumi, although there was no mention of the blockade at the older Don Mueang domestic airport.

The airport seizure has stranded 350,000 passengers and caused massive economic losses to the kingdom.

"As of this moment the PAD has allowed flights to take off and land immediately, both passenger and cargo flights," senior PAD member Somkiat Pongpaiboon told reporters at the airport.

Vudhihaandhu Vichairatama, chairman of the board of Airports of Thailand, said flights may be able to resume within 24 hours if there were no "technical problems".

"They're going to leave now," he told AFP-TV.

All equipment at the airport would have to be checked over before full airport operations could resume, he said.

The decision came hours after a grenade blast killed one PAD protester and wounded 22 others at Don Mueang. The PAD ended a three-month sit-in at the prime minister's office in Bangkok following similar attacks.

The PAD, who dress in yellow which they say symbolises their devotion to Thailand's much-revered king, are backed by the Bangkok business elite and middle classes, along with elements in the military and the palace.

Thaksin, whose supporters dress in red, is hugely popular with Thailand's rural and urban poor, especially in the north, his native area.

Two of the PPP's coalition partners were also dissolved because some of their executives were convicted of vote fraud after elections in December 2007 -- the first since the 2006 coup that ousted Thaksin.

But all six parties in the coalition vowed to make a comeback.

The PPP was ready to move lawmakers into a shell party called Pheu Thai (For Thais) formed in anticipation of the verdict and continue administering the country, spokesman spokesman Kudeb Saikrajang said.

The unrest has taken a heavy toll on travellers stranded in Thailand by the crisis, with two Canadians and a Dutchman dying in road accidents as they tried to flee the "Land of Smiles."

Airline passengers have been flooding to a naval base southeast of Bangkok and to the southern tourist town of Phuket to try to escape the country, along often dangerous roads.

The turmoil also forced Thailand to postpone a summit of the Southeast Asian bloc ASEAN, which was due to be held in Chiang Mai in mid-December.

- AFP/ir

 

 



Other asiapacific News
Three die during riots in China's Xinjiang region
Japan PM dealt fresh blow in regional election
Australia reports 11th H1N1 flu-related death
Torrential rain in China leaves at least 20 dead
Suspected arson kills four in Japan
NKorean ship reportedly sails home after being tracked by US
NLD says Ban's failure to meet Suu Kyi is "great loss"
North Korea boasts of military strength
Malaysian authorities seize 'Viagra coffee'
Japan mulls new missile defence system
Japanese voters go to polls in key test
Thai minister faces charges over airport seizure
US Marines in fierce battle during Afghan offensive
Slum tours give hard dose of reality in Indonesia
Bodies found from Indonesian plane crash
Beatings spark fears for Bangladesh's tigers
Flooding kills eight in northern Vietnam
SKorean military on watch for NKorean missile launches
China's President Hu leaves for G8 summit
Australian navy investigating sex bet allegations
Yudhoyono holds aces as Indonesia goes to polls
Five dead, 34 wounded in Philippine church bombing
Taliban claims to down Pakistani helicopter

 


Advertisements

 
Affiliate Sites:
 
About Us  |  Contact Us  |  Advertise with Us  |  Terms & Conditions