Amid
protests, Thailand's PM Yingluck Shinawatra dissolves parliament
Thai Prime Minister dissolves parliament
Bangkok, Thailand (CNN) -- Thai Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra dissolved the nation's parliament Monday and called for new elections. But the move did little to appease anti-government protesters who remained on the streets by the thousands.
Between
100,000 and 150,000 demonstrators rallied in Bangkok, with protest leaders
saying their goal Monday is to storm Shinawatra's office, known as Government
House.
The
country will hold new elections by February 2, but embattled Prime Minister
Yingluck Shinawatra may not be her party's choice to run, a government
spokesman told CNN on Monday.
"I
don't know whether the Pheu Thai Party will still vote (for) her to run again
or not," said spokesman Teerat Ratanasevi, referring to the ruling party.
Yingluck's
move Monday comes a day after Thailand's main opposition party, Democrat Party,
said its roughly 150 members would resign en masse from parliament because they
could no longer work with the government.
"I
don't want our country and the Thai people to suffer from more losses,"
Yingluck said in a televised address.
But
opposition party leader Abhisit Vejjajiva said the massive protests leave the
government little choice.
"I
think the best way for the Prime Minister to show responsibility is by
returning power to the people," he told CNN.
Still,
dissolving parliament and calling elections appear unlikely to placate protest
leader Suthep Thaugsuban, a former deputy prime minister for the Democrat
Party. He has called for power to be transferred to an unelected "people's
council."
Thaksin's influence
During
the weeks of demonstrations, protesters have occupied various government
offices. The rallies have been mostly peaceful, but clashes between protesters
and government supporters on November 30 left five people dead.
Protesters
and police, who had confronted each other with tear gas and rocks in parts of
Bangkok last week, agreed to a truce Tuesday in a show of respect for
Thailand's revered king, who celebrated his 86th birthday Thursday.
Protest
leaders have said they want to rid Thailand of the influence of former Prime
Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, the older brother of Yingluck.
That's
an ambitious goal in a country where parties affiliated with Thaksin, who built
his political success on populist policies that appealed to Thailand's rural
heartland, have won every election since 2001.
Thaksin
was ousted in a military coup in 2006 and has spent most of the time since then
in exile overseas. If he returns, he risks a two-year prison sentence on a
corruption conviction, which he says was politically motivated.
The
current protests in Bangkok were prompted by a botched attempt by Yingluck's
government to pass an amnesty bill that would have opened the door for her
brother's return.
That
move added fuel for critics who accuse Yingluck of being nothing more than
Thaksin's puppet, an allegation she has repeatedly denied.


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