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Toppled Thai party meets for Thaksin Skype address

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Dozens of ex-MPs from Thailand's toppled government met in public for the first time Thursday to hear a Skype address from the self-exiled former premier Thaksin Shinawatra, who sits at the crux of the country's political rupture.

Applause erupted among the Puea Thai Party faithful as the 67-year-old cop-turned-telecoms magnate appeared on a sketchy Skype link from an undisclosed country.

Thaksin and his affiliated parties have won every election since 2001, even though he has lived overseas for eight years to avoid jail on a graft conviction.

He is accused of toxifying the country with corruption by the Bangkok-centric royalist elite who have skewered his governments with coups and legal cases, plunging the kingdom into a decade-long political crisis.

The rare gathering of party grandees was ostensibly non-political -- in keeping with a junta ban on political expression.

Instead, it was billed as a 'cultural event' to celebrate Songkran -- the water festival and Thai new year -- with Puea Thai Party members decked out in bright floral traditional shirts.

"I miss you and I think about you all, especially the people that have fought for the party," Thaksin, who was also wearing a Songkran shirt, said in an address interrupted by a poor internet connection.

"Politics will only be sustainable when politicians do their jobs for the people," he added, in a thinly veiled jab at a junta that has failed to pump life into the country's insipid economy.

Former Thai premier Thaksin Shinawatra has lived overseas for eight years to avoid jail on a graft c...
Former Thai premier Thaksin Shinawatra has lived overseas for eight years to avoid jail on a graft conviction
Jewel Samad, AFP/File

- 'Military must do better' -

Puea Thai was booted out from office by the army in May 2014. Thaksin's sister Yingluck -- who was at Thursday's gathering -- was removed as prime minister by the courts a few days before the power grab.

Thaksin was also shunted from office by a coup in 2006.

He has not returned to Thailand since fleeing in 2008 to avoid a conviction he insists was politically motivated.

But his increasingly frequent media forays have infuriated junta leader Prayut Chan-O-Cha while reminding supporters that he -- and the pro-democracy camp -- have not been neutered.

"If the junta wants people to forget about Thaksin, they have to do a better job themselves," Jatuporn Prompan, the leader of the Shinawatra-alligned 'Red Shirt' protest movement, told AFP.

A junta spokesman did not return requests for comment.

The Shinawatra clan still draws the adoration of farmers from the north and northeast for recognising their changing social and economic aspirations -- as well as among a swathe of the urban middle class.

The Thai junta says it will hold elections in the summer of 2017, around a year after a referendum on a new constitution.

Critics of the proposed charter say it embeds military rule and aims to create a straitjacketed democracy, managed by an appointed senate.

"The election will be meaningless if it is based on this constitution," Chaturon Chaisaeng, the education minister in Yingluck's cabinet, told AFP.

"Our party still has lots of support.. but I cannot say if we will take part in any election based on this constitution."

Yingluck, Thailand's first female leader, also faces jail for negligence linked to a rice subsidy scheme.

But with her brother overseas, she carries the Shinawatra's star power in Thailand.

As a result the junta is going to increasingly absurd lengths to muffle support for the clan.

Last week police seized thousands of red bowls signed by Thaksin distributed in the Shinawatra heartlands for the Thai new year.

A woman who posted a picture with a bowl is also facing sedition charges.

Dozens of ex-MPs from Thailand’s toppled government met in public for the first time Thursday to hear a Skype address from the self-exiled former premier Thaksin Shinawatra, who sits at the crux of the country’s political rupture.

Applause erupted among the Puea Thai Party faithful as the 67-year-old cop-turned-telecoms magnate appeared on a sketchy Skype link from an undisclosed country.

Thaksin and his affiliated parties have won every election since 2001, even though he has lived overseas for eight years to avoid jail on a graft conviction.

He is accused of toxifying the country with corruption by the Bangkok-centric royalist elite who have skewered his governments with coups and legal cases, plunging the kingdom into a decade-long political crisis.

The rare gathering of party grandees was ostensibly non-political — in keeping with a junta ban on political expression.

Instead, it was billed as a ‘cultural event’ to celebrate Songkran — the water festival and Thai new year — with Puea Thai Party members decked out in bright floral traditional shirts.

“I miss you and I think about you all, especially the people that have fought for the party,” Thaksin, who was also wearing a Songkran shirt, said in an address interrupted by a poor internet connection.

“Politics will only be sustainable when politicians do their jobs for the people,” he added, in a thinly veiled jab at a junta that has failed to pump life into the country’s insipid economy.

Former Thai premier Thaksin Shinawatra has lived overseas for eight years to avoid jail on a graft c...

Former Thai premier Thaksin Shinawatra has lived overseas for eight years to avoid jail on a graft conviction
Jewel Samad, AFP/File

– ‘Military must do better’ –

Puea Thai was booted out from office by the army in May 2014. Thaksin’s sister Yingluck — who was at Thursday’s gathering — was removed as prime minister by the courts a few days before the power grab.

Thaksin was also shunted from office by a coup in 2006.

He has not returned to Thailand since fleeing in 2008 to avoid a conviction he insists was politically motivated.

But his increasingly frequent media forays have infuriated junta leader Prayut Chan-O-Cha while reminding supporters that he — and the pro-democracy camp — have not been neutered.

“If the junta wants people to forget about Thaksin, they have to do a better job themselves,” Jatuporn Prompan, the leader of the Shinawatra-alligned ‘Red Shirt’ protest movement, told AFP.

A junta spokesman did not return requests for comment.

The Shinawatra clan still draws the adoration of farmers from the north and northeast for recognising their changing social and economic aspirations — as well as among a swathe of the urban middle class.

The Thai junta says it will hold elections in the summer of 2017, around a year after a referendum on a new constitution.

Critics of the proposed charter say it embeds military rule and aims to create a straitjacketed democracy, managed by an appointed senate.

“The election will be meaningless if it is based on this constitution,” Chaturon Chaisaeng, the education minister in Yingluck’s cabinet, told AFP.

“Our party still has lots of support.. but I cannot say if we will take part in any election based on this constitution.”

Yingluck, Thailand’s first female leader, also faces jail for negligence linked to a rice subsidy scheme.

But with her brother overseas, she carries the Shinawatra’s star power in Thailand.

As a result the junta is going to increasingly absurd lengths to muffle support for the clan.

Last week police seized thousands of red bowls signed by Thaksin distributed in the Shinawatra heartlands for the Thai new year.

A woman who posted a picture with a bowl is also facing sedition charges.

AFP
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