Thousands
of protesters rallied in several parts of Bangkok on Thursday on the eve of a
key vote on a bill that would grant amnesty to leaders and others involved in
often-violent political conflicts that have afflicted Thailand for nearly a
decade.
The Senate announced it would move up the vote to Friday from Monday in an
attempt to ease rising tension over the bill, which has already passed the more
powerful lower house.
‘This is a very urgent issue that can’t wait. We want the (protesters) to know that their voices have been heard,’ Senate speaker Nikom Wairatpanij said, adding that a group of senators have agreed they will vote down the bill.
‘This is a very urgent issue that can’t wait. We want the (protesters) to know that their voices have been heard,’ Senate speaker Nikom Wairatpanij said, adding that a group of senators have agreed they will vote down the bill.
The opposition Democrat Party and its supporters say the ruling party-proposed legislation is intended to whitewash former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra’s alleged crimes and allow his return from self-imposed exile without going to jail.
Thaksin was ousted in a 2006 military coup over allegations of corruption and disrespect for King Bhumibol Adulyadej. His sister, Yingluck Shinawatra, is the current prime minister.
The bill has also drawn opposition from some Thaksin supporters who oppose immunity for Democrat Party leader and then-prime minister Abhisit Vejjajiva and his then-deputy for their alleged roles in the deaths of scores of protesters in a bloody 2010 crackdown.
The original draft of the bill, approved in principle by the lower house in August, did not extend the amnesty to the leaders of the pro- and anti-Thaksin groups, but a committee in mid-October changed the bill to include them.
Since it was passed by the lower house last Friday, the bill has set off daily demonstrations that have drawn tens of thousands of protesters onto Bangkok’s streets and put heavy pressure on the government and the Senate.
More than 1,000 protesters on Thursday gathered at a busy intersection in downtown Bangkok to blow whistles in protest of the bill, while thousands of others marched from a university campus to submit an anti-amnesty petition to the Senate.
The cabinet previously enacted a special security law in three Bangkok districts to bar demonstrators from entering areas surrounding the prime minister’s office and Parliament.
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